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Library Land Misallocation and Productivity

Land Misallocation and Productivity

Land Misallocation and Productivity

Resource information

Date of publication
November 2016
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
FAODOCREP:c8c3e3fc-9408-4642-94cf-7f2a7e63d022
Pages
52
License of the resource

Using detailed household-farm level data from Malawi, we measure real farm total factor productivity (TFP) controlling for a wide array of factor inputs, land quality, and transitory shocks. We nd that factor inputs are roughly evenly spread among farmers: operated land size and capital are essentially unrelated to farm TFP implying a strong negative eect on aggregate agricultural productivity. A reallocation of factors to their ecient use among existing farmers would increase agricultural productivity by a factor of 3.6-fold. We relate factor misallocation to severely restricted land markets as the vast majority of land is without a title and a very small portion of operated land is rented in. The gains from reallocation are 2.6 times larger for farms with no marketed land than for farms that operate marketed land. The ecient reallocation of factor inputs in the agricultural sector would trigger a profound process of structural change setting the farm size and the agricultural employment share of Malawi to industrialized levels.

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