Abstract

In this study of households living in informal settlements in three principal Chinese cities, we analyze the associations between informality, property rights, and poverty. We propose that informality can be understood in terms of property rights (presence/absence, strength, completeness, and ambiguity). Drawing on the property rights (entitlements) theories of Sen, de Soto, Ostrom, Alchian, and Coase, we refine a list of property rights effects that can be tested empirically. Using a household questionnaire survey of 1,208 respondents from a representative sample of 60 urban villages in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, we use robust regression models to detect statistical relationships between household performance on six poverty domains as a function of four property rights domains, controlling for income, human capital, and other influences. We find evidence for what we call Sen effects and de Soto effects. Our models show that some property rights are associated with lower poverty indicators. But we also find evidence to show that the absence, weakness, or ambiguity of property rights also reduce poverty indicators on particular domains, through what we assume to be a substitution effect. Informal settlements permit poorer household to live at lower costs than is usually, or officially, acceptable, and thus spend more on other welfare-enhancing expenditures. The distribution of property rights determines the size, distribution, and impacts of these trade-offs and shapes the economic and social performance of informal settlements.

Highlights

  • Informality is a widely used and contested notion used to characterize large parts of the housing sector in developing countries (Gilbert, 2002; Roy, 2011)

  • Predictors of poverty of study participants residing in the urban villages differed significantly, with Shanghai consistently positioning itself at the higher end of the spectrum followed by Beijing, while Guangzhou was at the opposite extreme

  • We sample the kind of analysis, theory-building, that our work permits; drawing out some general patterns discovered, using the distinctions made in Section 3 between Sen and de Soto effects and PRE categories

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Informality is a widely used and contested notion used to characterize large parts of the housing sector in developing countries (Gilbert, 2002; Roy, 2011). Most commentators would regard informal urban neighborhoods as a solution for the low-incomed, especially recent migrants, and a problem for many modernizing municipal governments. They arise and are distinguishable from other types of neighborhood through processes of land development that lie to various degrees outside of legal land conversion, development, and building processes. Because of the lack of laws governing their subdivision, construction, maintenance, and governance, they are often viewed as slums They are endured and even encouraged by governments because land conversion within formal legal frameworks renders housing unaffordable to large swaths of urban populations in developing countries. Formalizing or at least stabilizing tenure, infrastructure, and services are emphasized in normative studies

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call