Family Farming Knowledge Platform

Smallholders’ Land Ownership and Access in Sub-Saharan Africa

A new landscape?

While scholars agree on the importance of land rental markets for structural transformation in rural areas, evidence on the extent and nature of their operation, including potential obstacles to their improved functioning, remains limited. This study uses household-level data from six countries to start filling this gap and derive substantive as well as methodological lessons. The paper finds that rental markets transfer land to land-poor, labor-rich, and more productive producers throughout. But vast cross-country variation in transfers and the fact that female managers could possibly improve their income by leasing out land point towards barriers to participation that policy might address. Methodological and substantive conclusions are derived.

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Author: Klaus Deininger
Other authors: Fang Xia, Sara Savastano
Organization: World Bank Group
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Year: 2015
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Country/ies: Ethiopia, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania
Geographical coverage: Africa
Type: Working paper
Content language: English
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