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Cooperative Property Rights and Development: Evidence from Land Reform in El Salvador

Eduardo Montero

2021Journal of Political Economy58 citationsDOI

Abstract

In cooperative property rights systems, workers jointly own and manage production, whereas in outside-ownership systems, an owner contracts workers. Despite a rich literature on how the allocation of property rights matters for specialization, efficiency, and equity, little causal evidence exists. During a land reform in El Salvador in 1980, the military government reorganized properties owned by individuals with cumulative landholdings over 500 hectares into cooperatives; properties below this threshold remained as outside-owned properties. Using the discontinuous probability of cooperative formation, I provide evidence on the effects of cooperative property rights relative to outside ownership on specialization, productivity, and worker equity.

Topics & Concepts

Property rightsEquity (law)ProductivityGovernment (linguistics)Land tenureEconomicsCommon ownershipBusinessLand lawPublic economicsLabour economicsMarket economyEconomic systemEconomic growthMicroeconomicsAgriculturePolitical scienceGeographyLawPhilosophyArchaeologyLinguisticsLand Rights and ReformsCooperative Studies and EconomicsMicrofinance and Financial Inclusion
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