Land Property Rights, Cadasters and Economic Growth: A Cross-Country Panel 1000-2015 CE
Abstract
Since the transition to agricultural production, property rights to land have been a key institution for economic development. Clearly defined land rights provide economic agents with increased access to credit, secure returns on investment, free up resources used to defend one’s land rights, and
facilitate land market transactions. Formalized land records also strengthen governments’ capacity to
tax land-owners. Despite a large body of extant micro-level empirical studies, macro-level research
on the evolution of formal rights to land, and their importance for economic growth, has so far been
lacking. In this paper, we present a novel data set on the emergence of state-administered cadasters
(i.e. centralized land records) for 159 countries over the last millennium. We also analyze empirically
the association between the development of cadastral institutions and long-run economic growth in a panel of countries. Our findings demonstrate a substantive positive effect of the introduction of
cadasters on modern per capita income levels, supporting theoretical conjectures that states with
more formalized property rights to land should experience higher levels of economic growth.
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Date
2021Author
D’Arcy, Michelle
Nistotskaya, Marina
Olsson, Ola
ISBN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2021:3
Language
eng