Abstract

ABSTRACT: Self-operated land and operated by tenure may affect the sustainability of farming in a region. This study planned to analyze how rural households switch away from tea farming even they have parental land, and how landless access the land for tea farming. For this a total of 138 tea growers were interviewed including 27 farmers who had just ownership of land and had left the tea farming. Logistic regression was applied to assess the determinants of rural household’s decision to exit and enter the land market. Farmers were compared over their farm management practices and personal characteristics. The owned farmers were good in management and adoption of good practice in tea farming than those who accessed land as a shareholder and not had their own land. Rural households head as getting older, having high education and also having an off-farm occupation, having more university graduated family members, and family members having off-farm occupations are more likely to exit from farming and supply their land to rental markets. On the other side, an older and highly educated head of landless family is less likely to become a shareholder. Here also off-farm occupation has a negative and insignificant effect on the probability of landless household working as a shareholder. If the head of the landless family has a wish to become a successful farmer, then he is more likely to work as an owner. It implies that a person is less likely to work as a shareholder and more likely to get land with ownership rights not only land-using rights.

Highlights

  • Land tenure is a legal and customarily defined relationship among households, individuals or groups, with respect to land

  • The aim of this study was to analyze the informal land market, the key factors that influence the decision of the farmers to leave tea farming and give land to shareholders

  • The development of land tenure markets in agriculture plays an important role in enhancing productivity, improving income and overall welfare of the rural households

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Summary

Introduction

Land tenure is a legal and customarily defined relationship among households, individuals or groups, with respect to land. It creates opportunities for landless households to access land for farming purpose via defining the rights of use. It is a way in which, the land is accessed, managed, and it is defined that who can control and use the land resources such as water, trees, etc. (BUGRI, 2008; USAID, 2013; FAO, 2017). The land tenure is an emerging issue in rural areas for sustainable farming. Many structural changes in farming have altered the working opportunities for the rural labor force. Approved 07.11.20 Returned CR-2020-0014.R2 by the author

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