Social Capital and the Terms of Trade for Farmland |
| |
Authors: | Lindon J. Robison,Robert J. Myers,& Marcelo E. Siles |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Agricultural Economics at Michigan State University,;Center for Advanced Studies of International Development (CASID) at Michigan State University |
| |
Abstract: | Social capital is a person or group's sympathy for or sense of obligation to another person or group. This article introduces social capital into a neoclassical model of farmland exchange and shows how relationships alter the terms of trade. Empirical evidence from a survey of farmers shows that the type of relationship farmland sellers have with farmland buyers has a statistically significant and economically important effect on the minimum-sell price for farmland. Compared to the minimum-sell price when selling to a total stranger in an arm's-length transaction, farmland sellers discount prices to friendly neighbors and relatives and require a premium from unfriendly neighbors and influential people in the community. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|