Passar para o conteúdo principal

page search

Displaying 1009 - 1020 of 1342

HAZARDS OF EXPROPRIATION:TENURE INSECURITY AND INVESTMENT IN RURAL CHINA

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
Dezembro, 2002
China

This paper uses household data from Northeast China to examine the link between investment and land tenure insecurity induced by China’'s system of village-level land reallocation. We quantify expropriation risk using a hazard analysis of individual plot tenures and incorporate the predicted “hazards of expropriation” into an empirical analysis of plot-level investment.

Economic and Ecological Transformation Processes in East German Water Management Regimes: The Role of Property Rights and Governance Structures

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
Dezembro, 2002

Like in many low moor regions in East Germany, long-standing intensive arable farming - enabled by complex melioration - has caused soil deterioration and high water runoff in the 'Schraden'. More than ten years of economic and political transformation has worsened the situation and even added new problems.

INSECURITY OF PROPERTY RIGHTS AND MATCHING IN THE TENANCY MARKET

LandLibrary Resource
Conference Papers & Reports
Dezembro, 2002
República Dominicana

This paper analyzes the effects of insecure property rights over land on the functioning of the land rental market in the Dominican Republic. It shows that insecurity of property rights not only reduces the level of activity of the land rental market, but also causes market segmentation.

ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF CALIFORNIA'S GOLF COURSE FACILITIES IN 2000

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
Dezembro, 2002

People spent $4.350 billion at California golf course facilities in 2000. The total sales, income, and tax impacts on the state economy were $7.872 billion, $4.546 billion, and $1.370 billion in 2000. Direct sales of $4.251 billion directly supported 62,173 jobs, and , through indirect and induced sales impacts, an additional 37,609 jobs.

PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR LAND PRESERVATION: MEASURING RELATIVE PREFERENCES IN DELAWARE

LandLibrary Resource
Policy Papers & Briefs
Dezembro, 2002

Public preferences for nonmarket services of preserved land in Delaware are measured using two survey techniques. The results of a conjoint experiment, using a sample of 199 Delawareans, suggest that the environmental and agricultural attributes of preserved land are most important to the residents.