Abstract

The land tenure reform is important for forest resource management worldwide. Since China initiated a new round of collective forestland tenure reform (CFTR) in 2003, improving forest output by clarifying property rights plays a crucial role in realizing sustainable forest resource management. Using survey data of 312 bamboo plantation households from Southern China, this paper empirically examines the impact path of land property rights on forest resources. The estimation results show that both the forestland use right and disposal right are able to significantly improve the forest output by encouraging households to invest and optimizing the allocation of forestry labor. Particularly, the results reveal that the use right has a positive impact on forest output through forestland investment. With regard to the disposal right, we find that it has a positive effect on forest output through forestland investment, but it has a negative impact on forest output through the forestry labor allocation. The findings of this study suggest that to promote the growth of forest resources, the government should endow households with a more complete set of rights, and further strengthen their understanding of property rights. In addition, our findings enhance the understanding of the collective forestland tenure reform in China; they also have implications for the decentralized management of forestry elsewhere in the world.

Highlights

  • Using Stata14.0 statistical software, this paper examined the multi-collinearity of all independent variables

  • While our results further find that the disposal right has a restraining impact on forestry labor allocation, based on this, an unexpected finding is that land property rights can indirectly affect forest output through forestland investment and forestry labor allocation

  • Using survey data of bamboo planters in Zhejiang and Jiangxi provinces, this paper analyzed the effect of land property rights on forest resources

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Summary

Introduction

As one of the most important resources on Earth, forest resources provide various goods for human beings, play an essential ecosystem service function in protecting biodiversity, regulating climate and conserving water resources [1,2,3]. Property rights are considered the most important policy topic to the development of forest resources [4,5,6]. Many countries have implemented forestland tenure reforms through the decentralization and devolution to confirm or transfer forestland to local communities [7,8]. Joint forest management in India, community forestry in Nepal, public participation in the United States and First Nations rights in Canada [9,10,11]. Forestry decentralized management has become increasingly important in the world

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