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Three Essays on Agricultural Land and Labor Markets

Authors :
Arteaga, Julian
Carter, Michael1
Shenoy, Ashish
Arteaga, Julian
Arteaga, Julian
Carter, Michael1
Shenoy, Ashish
Arteaga, Julian
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This dissertation is composed of three essays that study aspects related to the way in which agricultural land and labor markets operate, with a special emphasis on the particularities of agricultural input markets in developing countries. The first chapter investigates how government restrictions on land markets impact the agricultural sector, and assesses whether such restrictions can curb distortions that stem from the presence of market power. To do so, I develop a general-equilibrium production model in which large landholders exert market power in both land and labor markets, and where there are limits on land accumulation. Restrictions reduce the inefficiencies arising from market power, but also hinder productive reallocation, with the net effect on productivity depending on initial levels of land concentration. I empirically test the model’s predictions by estimating how a law imposing municipality-specific limits on landholdings in Colombia affected productivity, land concentration, and agricultural labor markets. To estimate the impact of the law, I combine a collection of rich micro-level data sources which include a newly built dataset on municipal agricultural productivity. Exploiting plausibly exogenous variation in restriction stringency across bordering municipalities, I find that imposing restrictions caused a permanent reduction in productivity and only modest reductions in overall land inequality. However, restrictions also increased both agricultural workers’ earnings and the employment share in agriculture, suggesting they were beneficial to landless wage laborers by reducing labor market power.The second chapter (co-authored with Nicolás de Roux, Margarita Gáfaro, Ana María Ibáñez, and Heitor Pellegrina) studies the effect of weather shocks on rural land sales and the farm size distribution. Using a unique administrative dataset with transaction-level information and a land registry covering most of Colombia’s farmland, it shows that extreme t

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1452695150
Document Type :
Electronic Resource