2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2010.05.001
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Land tenure and investment incentives: Evidence from West Africa

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Cited by 253 publications
(83 citation statements)
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“…Seventy percent of the outstanding loan (about €1·43 billion) is the share of transnational investors, which includes Ethiopian diaspora community members. In countries where land is not a publicly owned property, it is not a surprise if an investor uses his/her land lease agreement as collateral for bank loans (Fenske, 2011;Fostel & Geanakoplos, 2016). However, Ethiopia's case is unique.…”
Section: Commercial Farmlands As Collateralmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Seventy percent of the outstanding loan (about €1·43 billion) is the share of transnational investors, which includes Ethiopian diaspora community members. In countries where land is not a publicly owned property, it is not a surprise if an investor uses his/her land lease agreement as collateral for bank loans (Fenske, 2011;Fostel & Geanakoplos, 2016). However, Ethiopia's case is unique.…”
Section: Commercial Farmlands As Collateralmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These changes in opinion regarding women’s land ownership suggest, qualitatively, that the programme has had some impact on perceptions of women’s land rights in these villages. This is potentially an important change in social norms, as evidence suggests that more secure land rights contributes to women controlling the income from their cultivated land and an increased willingness to invest in land (Fenske, 2011), such as increased tree planting (Goldstein & Udry, 2008; Quisumbing et al 2001Goldstein & Udry, 2008), and the adoption of soil conservation techniques (Deininger, Ali, & Yamano, 2008). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following a seminal study in Ghana (Besley, 1995), positive impacts of efforts to increase land tenure security on investment in rural areas have been documented in China (Jacoby et al, 2002), Thailand (Feder et al, 1988), Latin America (Bandiera, 2007), Eastern Europe (Rozelle and Swinnen, 2004), and Africa where weak rights, often held by disadvantaged groups or outsiders, lead to significant reduction in fallowing that can be linked to lower yields (Deininger and Jin, 2006;Fenske, 2010Fenske, , 2011Goldstein and Udry, 2008). In urban areas, efforts to enhance tenure security have led to increased levels of self-assessed land values (Lanjouw and Levy, 2002), greater investment in housing, and female empowerment (Field, 2005).…”
Section: Linking Property Rights Interventions To Economic Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%