Distortion of incentives for farm households in KwaZulu.
Date
1989
Authors
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Abstract
KwaZulu is a less developed region of South Africa. Low
agricultural incomes have contributed to widespread poverty
in the region. Despite intense population pressure on the
land, arable resources are underutilized. Conversely, grazing
resources are overutilized.
Tribal tenure prevents the sale of land and has also
precluded an active land rental market. Population growth has
reduced farm sizes because households have an incentive to
retain their rural land rights. At the same time, the
opportunity cost of household farm labour has increased. As a
result, the average cost of producing crops has risen
relative to product prices. Households are generally able to
procure food and income at lower cost by allocating better
educated workers to urban wage employment. Consequently, many
households have little incentive to produce crops and are
deficit food producers. Arable land is underutilized because
these households cannot rent land to others who would farm
it.
A mathematical programming model constructed from models of
representative households demonstrates that output responses
to higher food prices and reduced input costs are small.
Furthermore, an increase in food prices harms most rural
households and lower input costs do little to improve
household welfare. However, the model predicts that a land
rental market will have a substantial impact on crop
production and could generate significant income
opportunities in agriculture and its service industries. A rental market for arable land would require minor institutional changes and has equity as well as efficiency
advantages.
The uncultivated portion of a household's tribal land
allotment is regarded as common property for grazing
purposes. Access to these grazing resources is not restricted
and an empirical analysis of herd data indicates that
stocking rates decline when the private cost of keeping
cattle increases relative to their perceived benefits. Unlike
most 'solutions' to the common property problem,
privatization of grazing land would not only reduce
overstocking and its associated social cost, but would also
improve incentives to upgrade herd and pasture quality. It is
recommended that privatization of grazing land (even in the
limited sense that arable land is privately controlled)
should be encouraged.
Description
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1989.
Keywords
Agriculture--Economic aspects--KwaZulu-Natal., Agriculture--Mathematical models., Income--KwaZulu-Natal., Households--KwaZulu-Natal., Land use, Rural--KwaZulu-Natal., Theses--Agricultural economics.