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Stock-Taking of Land Reform and Farm Restructuring

Stock-Taking of Land Reform and Farm Restructuring. Results of a World Bank-FAO policy research study. David Sedik FAO. Why a Stocktaking?. Why a Stocktaking?. Though land reform can be essential for rural growth and poverty alleviation, it does not seem to have lived up to its potential

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Stock-Taking of Land Reform and Farm Restructuring

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  1. Stock-Taking of Land Reform and Farm Restructuring Results of a World Bank-FAO policy research study David Sedik FAO

  2. Why a Stocktaking?

  3. Why a Stocktaking? • Though land reform can be essential for rural growth and poverty alleviation, it does not seem to have lived up to its potential • Production, yields, services declined, unemployment increased – did land reform contribute to this?

  4. Four case studies • Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Moldova • How did reforms affect farm performance and rural well-being between farm types and across countries? • Farm performance measured by growth in yields, productivity, and profitability • Well-being measured by subjective perceptions

  5. Sources of information and data • Primary • Household surveys • Farm enterprise surveys • Focus groups • Key informant interviews • Semi-structured interviews • Secondary • Literature review • Official statistics • Data from other surveys and studies

  6. Overview of presentation • Selected comparative results • Agricultural production and land reform • Enabling environment for agriculture • Economic performance • Households’ perceptions on well-being and rural services • Households’ acceptance of land reform • Gender findings • Policy implications

  7. Overview of presentation • Selected comparative results • Agricultural production and land reform • Enabling environment for agriculture • Economic performance • Households’ perceptions on well-being and rural services • Households’ acceptance of land reform • Gender findings • Policy implications

  8. Land reform not the reason for agricultural decline in the 1990s In all four countries, agricultural production and productivity began to • fall before land reform • grow after land reform

  9. Moldova

  10. Azerbaijan

  11. Good enabling environment yet to be established in CIS countries

  12. Yield and area growth drives recovery in Azerbaijan

  13. Crop yield growth drives recovery in Kazakhstan

  14. Crop yield and area growth drive recovery in Moldova

  15. Individual farm crop yields equal to or higher in all CIS (official stats)

  16. TFP and land productivity greater in family farms from sample Red italics indicate figures are statistically different at 20% or better level.

  17. TFP and land productivity greater in family farms from sample Red italics indicate figures are statistically different at 20% or better level.

  18. Rural HH subjective well-being: MD better than BG, but not as high as AZ or KZ Percent of households

  19. High portion of income from farming in Moldova and Azerbaijan Portion of family income from agriculture

  20. Rural public services deterioration worst in AZ, BG, improvements in MD, KZ 1. Scale from 0 to 100: 0=not available, 100=always available. 2. “Before” refers to the period before dismantling of collective/state farms.

  21. Rural public services deterioration worst in AZ, BG, improvements in MD, KZ 1. Scale from 0 to 100: 0=not available, 100=always available. 2. “Before” refers to the period before dismantling of collective/state farms.

  22. % Land allocation resulting from land reforms is least widely accepted in Moldova Percentage of households perceiving land allocation as fair

  23. Land legislation is gender neutral but access to information, resources and power seems to disadvantage women • In all four countries, female headed households • Use less land • Have lower perceived well-being • Rent out more land • Qualitative interviews suggest that in all countries women as compared to men have • Less access to information and legal resources • Less access to agricultural equipment • More household responsibilities

  24. Overview of presentation • Selected comparative results • Agricultural production and land reform • Enabling environment for agriculture • Economic performance • Households’ perceptions on well-being and rural services • Households’ acceptance of land reform • Gender findings • Policy implications

  25. Implications for policy • Ag production stable or grows after robust land reforms in MD, BG, AZ. This suggests that these reforms were beneficial. • In CIS countries, individual sector yields equal to or higher than those in corporate farms. • Land reform alone not sufficient to ensure better farm performance or better well being

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