2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jce.2012.11.003
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On the transaction values of land use rights in rural China

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Cited by 28 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Feder (1988), Eggertsson (1990), Besley (1995), Alston et al (1996), Feder & Nishio (1999), Marsh et al(2006), Deininger and Jin(2009), Ma et al (2015) have argued that land property-right institutions and land registration is the basis for improved tenure security, economic behavioral changes, land productivity improvement, access to formal credit, developing markets and encouraging long-term investment. In the Chinese context Khantachavana, et al(2013) point out that a market for mortgaging LUR, if developed, would provide farmers with access to credit markets, stimulate investment and improve operational performance and productivity, while enabling farmers to reallocate resources and responded to the changing Chinese economy. 2 On innovation Schumpeter writes "it is by means of new combinations of existing factors of production embodied in new plants, and typically, new firms producing either new commodities, or by new, i.e.…”
Section: Whatmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Feder (1988), Eggertsson (1990), Besley (1995), Alston et al (1996), Feder & Nishio (1999), Marsh et al(2006), Deininger and Jin(2009), Ma et al (2015) have argued that land property-right institutions and land registration is the basis for improved tenure security, economic behavioral changes, land productivity improvement, access to formal credit, developing markets and encouraging long-term investment. In the Chinese context Khantachavana, et al(2013) point out that a market for mortgaging LUR, if developed, would provide farmers with access to credit markets, stimulate investment and improve operational performance and productivity, while enabling farmers to reallocate resources and responded to the changing Chinese economy. 2 On innovation Schumpeter writes "it is by means of new combinations of existing factors of production embodied in new plants, and typically, new firms producing either new commodities, or by new, i.e.…”
Section: Whatmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in this process, driven by the motivation to seek short-term economic benefits, certain regions of China have made blind decisions in the use of land resources that is not scientific. For example, Khantachavana et al studied the transaction values of land use rights in rural China [7]; Zoomers et al analyzed acquiring and developing land safely [8]; Shen et al studied how the healthcare system uses land [9]; and Mertz and Mertens studied the conservation and land sharing policies in developing countries [10]. Land is often over-developed amid rapid economic growth-resources are wasted, and the entire ecological environment suffers damages, as discussed below:…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some studies concluded that they leave cities because they cannot enjoy the same public services as urban residents or fail to adapt to city life [17,18], or because they have to go back to take care of the elderly or left-behind children [15,19]. Some other research find that some villagers are back to the countryside as they choose to return to villages to engage in new types of agriculture (such as sightseeing orchards or farms) or new rural construction (a strategy proposed by the Chinese government in 2005 to stimulate rural development) [20][21][22]. In view of this trend, the state proposed a new macro strategy of harmonious development of urbanization and de-urbanization in the National People's Congress in 2018, which emphasizes the complement of urbanization process and rural development.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the rural society is being affected by the new rules of resource allocation and the formation of new interest groups. However, even if the state needs to enhance its control over the countryside by resource allocation and social mobilization, the basic habits, customs and norms, which have never completely disappeared, are the basic conditions for China's rural development [22].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%