The Impact of Intergenerational Inheritance on the Scale of Farmland Management in the Context of Aging: Evidence from Eastern China

Author:

Ji Dengyan12,Shi Xiaoping3,Luo Xiaojuan4ORCID,Ma Xianlei3

Affiliation:

1. Research Center of Resource and Environment Economics, East China University of Technology, Nanchang 330013, China

2. Key Laboratory of Mine Environmental Monitoring and Improving around Poyang Lake of Ministry of Natural Resources, East China University of Technology, Nanchang 330013, China

3. Chinese Resources & Environment and Development Academy, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China

4. Jiangxi Economic Development Research Institute, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330047, China

Abstract

The dilemma of aging and lack of successors must be understood to improve the scale efficiency and competitiveness of China’s agriculture. This paper uses a survey of 1347 farmers in Liaoning, Jiangsu, and Jiangxi and applies tobit and probit models to explore the impact of intergenerational inheritance on farmland management in terms of the current scale and willingness for expansion. The results show that (1) an increased probability of intergenerational inheritance in agriculture can significantly increase the scale of farmland operations, with a greater effect on the current scale than on the willingness to expand; (2) the scale upgrading effect of agricultural intergenerational inheritance is greater in regions with frequent nonagricultural activities and in families with middle or low-scale farmland operations; and (3) the promotion effect on the current scale is greater for elderly farmers 60 years old or above than for farmers who are 40–59 years old, while the promotion effect on the willingness for expansion exists only for the latter. Therefore, policies should attract young, skilled laborers to return to their hometowns for agricultural employment and entrepreneurship and support farmland transfer and scale operation in regions with frequent nonagricultural activities or a lower scale of agricultural operations.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Research Center of Resource and Environment Economics, East China University of Technology

Jiangxi Provincial Education Science Planning Project

Doctoral Research Initiation Fund Project of East China University of Technology

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

Reference50 articles.

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2. Li, N., Zhou, Q.Y., and Zou, L.Q. (2021). Will network sales of agricultural products affect the farmland scales of new agricultural business entities?. J. Agrotech. Econ., 548–563.

3. The importance of succession on business growth: A case study of family farms in Switzerland and Norway;Mann;J. Socio-Econ. Agric.,2013

4. Handing down the farm? The increasing uncertainty of irrigated farm succession in Australia;Wheeler;J. Rural Stud.,2012

5. Farm persistence and adaptation at the rural–urban interface: Succession and farm adjustment;Inwood;J. Rural Stud.,2012

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