Institutional Reform in the Rural Sector with Labor and Capital Flows:Factor Income Effects, Structural Changes and Misallocations
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Abstract
We analyze the general equilibrium effects of a fundamental property regime transition in the rural sector
- agricultural or resource - when both labor and (reproducible) capital are free to move. In contrast to
manufacturing, rural production has two characteristic features: it uses a fixed natural asset (land or
other natural resources) and operates under one of two property regime types: common property versus
exclusive property. Common property is fundamentally characterized with sharing, thus corresponding to
such institutions as the family farm (Lewis 1954), free access to resources, and collective use, but adapted
for the presence of capital use. We show that labor may actually gain from being effectively forced out of
the rural sector. More generally, relative factor intensities determine the factor return effects of the
transition, as well as either capital or labor deepening in both sectors. And while the unit cost of effective
input efforts decrease, both factors flow out of the rural sector. Under a common property regime, the
agricultural productivity gaps for labor and capital are uniquely determined by the output elasticity of
land.
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Keywords
Institutions, Property Rights, Agriculture, Natural resources, Factor Migration, Factor Returns, Redistribution, Factor Misallocation, Structural Changes, Agrarian Reform, Resource Privatisation, 1606E
