Yuanyuan Yi (), Jintao Xu, Gunnar Köhlin and Klaus Deininger
Abstract: Since 2003, China has implemented a large-scale forest devolution reform by giving villages the right to devolve tenure rights of collectively owned forests to households. Some villages chose no reform, and the forest continued to be owned and controlled by the village committee. In other villages, the reform was adopted and forests became owned and managed by individual households. In a third group, the reform was adopted and forests became householdowned but are managed jointly. We define the third type as devolution-based collective action, and study how it affects forests and participating households. We exploit a panel dataset of nearly 3,000 households and remote-sensing data in 262 rural villages in eight provinces in China. Using difference-in-difference and propensity score matching methods, we show that the devolutionbased collective action increased forest cover in the short term. However, there is only limited evidence that it reduced vegetation degradation in the medium term. We also show that households’ income from off-farm work increases, as does their total income. We find that collective action reduces the likelihood of income falling below the poverty line. Our findings are suggestive that property rights-based collective action can lead to improved forest management and more engagement in off-farm work.
Keywords: devolution; collective action; forest management; Collective Forest Tenure Reform; China
JEL-codes: D31; Q15; Q23; Q24; Q56
Language: English
39 pages, June 1, 2020
Full text files
MS%20712%20DP%2020-21.pdf Full text
Questions (including download problems) about the papers in this series should be directed to Franklin Amuakwa-Mensah ()
Report other problems with accessing this service to Sune Karlsson ().
RePEc:hhs:gunefd:2020_021This page generated on 2024-09-13 22:14:35.