2016
DOI: 10.1108/caer-06-2014-0062
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Drivers of household entry and intensity in land rental market in rural China: evidence from North Henan Province

Abstract: Purpose Economic reforms in rural China have led to the emergence of land and labor markets. The development of rural land rental markets can improve agricultural productivity and equity by facilitating transfers of land to more productive farmers and facilitating the participation in the non-farm economy of less productive farmers. In contrast to the burgeoning development of off-farm labor markets, the development of rural land rental market has lagged. The purpose of this study is to analyze … Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…The full‐time worker variable has a negative and significant impact on leasing in farmland, suggesting that rural households with a higher share of full‐time off‐farm workers are less likely to lease in farmland (6.3 per cent). Our finding is consistent with Yan and Huo (), who found that the likelihood of participation in farmland leasing in decreases with the total number of household members’ off‐farm work days. Moreover, our finding is in line with Che () and Kung (), who found that local off‐farm work by members decreased the likelihood of leasing in and increased the likelihood of leasing out farmland.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The full‐time worker variable has a negative and significant impact on leasing in farmland, suggesting that rural households with a higher share of full‐time off‐farm workers are less likely to lease in farmland (6.3 per cent). Our finding is consistent with Yan and Huo (), who found that the likelihood of participation in farmland leasing in decreases with the total number of household members’ off‐farm work days. Moreover, our finding is in line with Che () and Kung (), who found that local off‐farm work by members decreased the likelihood of leasing in and increased the likelihood of leasing out farmland.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…In constrast, Ma et al (2014) find that many rural migrants do not want to give up their rural land use rights, because of difficulties accessing social security and acquiring benefits that are enjoyed by urban residents (Whally and Zhang, 2007). Yan and Huo (2016) find that migration days correlate negatively with both land rent participation and land rent farm size. Therefore, the results remain mixed regarding whether rural labor migration would facilitate or hamper the development of the land rental market in rural China.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some studies found that off-farm employment and migration had critical positive impacts on farmland renting-out behavior of rural households [22,26,27]. Not only did availability of off-farm employment significantly improve farmland rental, but tenure security and agricultural ability also played a critical role in farmland rental [28,29]. In addition, the impacts of credit market development, productive heterogeneity among farmers, institutional building, contract conditions, property rights, household attributes, and institutional building on farmland rental market were extensively studied [23,30].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%