Qin, PinCarlsson, FredrikXu, Jintao2009-06-302009-06-302009-06-301403-2465http://hdl.handle.net/2077/20591Various decentralization experiments are currently underway in the Chinese forestry sector. However, a key question often ignored by researchers and policy makers is what farmers really want from reform. This paper addresses this question using a survey-based choice experiment. We investigated farmers’ preferences for various property-rights attributes of a forestland contract. We found that farmers are highly concerned with what types of rights a contract provides. Reducing perceived risks of contract termination and introducing a priority right in the renewal of an old contract significantly increase farmers’ marginal willingness to pay (MWTP) for a forest contract. An extended waiting time for rights to harvest the forest reduces a farmer’s perceived value of a contract. Farmers are also concerned with the tenure length. In one region, the annual willingenss to pay for a 50-year contract is even higher than the annual willingness to pay for 25-year contract.engChinaChoice experimentForestMWTPProperty rightsForestland Reform in China: What do the Farmers Want? A Choice Experiment on Farmers’ Property Rights PreferencesText