The effects of China's Sloping Land Conversion Program on agricultural households |
| |
Authors: | Zhen Liu Arne Henningsen |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. School of Business, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, China;2. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C, Denmark |
| |
Abstract: | In the late 1990s, China aimed to mitigate environmental degradation from agricultural production activities by introducing the world's largest “Payments for Environmental Services? program: the Sloping Land Conversion Program (SLCP). We develop a microeconomic Agricultural Household Model, which can model the production, consumption, and nonfarm labor supply decisions of agricultural households in rural China in a theoretically consistent fashion. Based on this theoretical model, we derive an empirical specification, which we econometrically estimate using the Hausman–Taylor method and a large longitudinal farm household data set. The empirical results significantly differ between regions, but are generally consistent with the results of our theoretical comparative static analysis, for example, that the SLCP significantly decreases agricultural production. While the SLCP only increases nonfarm labor supply and total consumption in some regions, these effects could not be observed in others. The recent reduction of the SLCP compensation payment rates generally had negligible effects on agricultural production and off‐farm work and only very small effects on household consumption. |
| |
Keywords: | H31 Q12 R38 Sloping Land Conversion Program Agricultural household model Hausman– Taylor estimator |
|
|