Land Security and Mobility Frictions

Author:

Adamopoulos Tasso1,Brandt Loren2,Chen Chaoran1,Restuccia Diego3,Wei Xiaoyun4

Affiliation:

1. York University , Canada

2. University of Toronto , Canada

3. University of Toronto, Canada, and National Bureau of Economic Research , United States

4. Zhejiang University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University , China

Abstract

Abstract Frictions that impede the mobility of workers across occupations and space are a prominent feature of developing countries. We disentangle the role of insecure property rights from other labor-mobility frictions for the reallocation of labor from agriculture to nonagriculture and from rural to urban areas. We combine rich household and individual-level panel data from China and an equilibrium quantitative framework featuring sorting of workers across locations and occupations. We explicitly model the farming household and the endogenous decisions of who operates the family farm and who potentially migrates, capturing an additional channel of selection in the household. We find that land insecurity has substantial negative effects on agricultural productivity and structural change, raising the share of rural households operating farms by over 40 percentage points and depressing agricultural productivity by more than 20%. Comparatively, these quantitative effects are as large as those from all residual labor-mobility frictions. We measure a sharp reduction in overall labor-mobility barriers over 2004–2018 in the Chinese economy, all accounted for by improved land security, consistent with reforms covering rural land in China during the period. JEL Codes: O11, O14, O4, E02, Q1.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference57 articles.

1. The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation;Acemoglu;American Economic Review,2001

2. Institutions as a Fundamental Cause of Long-Run Growth;Acemoglu;Handbook of Economic Growth,2005

3. Adamopoulos Tasso, Brandt Loren, Chen Chaoran, Restuccia Diego, Wei Xiaoyun, “Replication Data for: ‘Land Security and Mobility Frictions’,” (2024), Harvard Dataverse, https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/G3WBU7.

4. Misallocation, Selection, and Productivity: A Quantitative Analysis with Panel Data from China;Adamopoulos;Econometrica,2022

5. The Size Distribution of Farms and International Productivity Differences;Adamopoulos;American Economic Review,2014

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