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Item Details
Title:
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LAND IN TRANSITION
REFORM AND POVERTY IN RURAL VIETNAM |
By: |
Martin Ravallion, Dominique van de Walle |
Format: |
Hardback |

List price:
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£59.50 |
We believe that this item is permanently unavailable, and so we cannot source
it.
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ISBN 10: |
0821372750 |
ISBN 13: |
9780821372753 |
Publisher: |
WORLD BANK PUBLICATIONS |
Pub. date: |
15 April, 2008 |
Series: |
Equity and Development Series |
Pages: |
220 |
Description: |
This book offers a set of methods, drawing on the tool kit of modern economics, to ascertain what Vietnam's economy would have looked like without reforms and assesses what types of households are likely to gain from the reforms. The book's findings have implications on broader issues of social protection in developing rural economies. |
Synopsis: |
The policy reforms called for in the transition from a socialist command-economy to a developing market-economy bring both opportunities and risks to the living standards of a country's citizens. Starting in the early 1980s in Vietnam, reforms were introduced to promote the transition from the socialist mode of agricultural production to market-based agriculture. The book assesses the welfare impacts, both in terms of efficiency and equity, of the main elements of Vietnam's agrarian reforms, namely the dismantling of the old collectives and assigning land to households, and the introduction of a market in land-use rights. Assessing the welfare impacts of an economy-wide reform is never going to be easy. One does not have the enormous informational advantage of being able to observe non-participants in the reform at the same time as one observes participants. The lack of a comparison group means that we must rely more heavily on economic theory to infer the counterfactual of what the economy would have looked like without the reform and assess what types of households are likely to gain from the reforms, and which are likely to lose.The book offers a set of methods for this purpose, drawing on the tool kit of modern economics. The book's principal finding is that, while there were certainly some losers (including amongst the poor), on balance Vietnam's agrarian reforms were poverty reducing, though more so in some regions than others. This finding, and a number of the more detailed findings along the way, will have implications for other countries that have not embarked on similar reforms, including neighboring China. The book's findings will also have implications for broader issues of social protection in developing rural economies. |
Illustrations: |
Illustrations |
Publication: |
US |
Imprint: |
World Bank Publications |
Returns: |
Returnable |
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