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Incentives for Urban Land Improvement
A city government observes that many vacant lots are being used for informal, short-term gardening. The gardeners plant vegetables that can be harvested quickly, but they do not make any long-term improvements to the soil or infrastructure. The city introduces a new program that grants individuals exclusive rights to use a specific lot for a guaranteed period of 10 years. Based on this change in the rules governing land use, explain why a gardener in this new program would be more likely to invest in planting fruit trees, which take several years to mature, compared to the gardeners who used the lots informally.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Communal Tenure
Open Access Resources
State Ownership
Private Property
Impact of Land Use Rules on Agricultural Investment
Effectiveness of Status Signaling
Two neighboring agricultural communities, A and B, grow the same crops in similar soil and climate conditions. In Community A, farmers are granted the right to cultivate plots of land, but they cannot legally sell these plots or use them as security for loans. In Community B, farmers hold formal titles to their land, allowing them to freely sell it or use it as collateral. Observers note that farmers in Community B invest significantly more in long-term improvements like irrigation systems and modern equipment, leading to higher overall productivity. Which of the following best analyzes the primary reason for this difference in economic outcomes?
Match each description of a rule governing land use with its most likely economic consequence for the land users.
Incentives for Urban Land Improvement
Interpreting Consumer Borrowing Behavior
The economic productivity of two physically identical parcels of land, with the same soil quality, climate, and access to water, will necessarily be the same, regardless of the rules governing how they can be used and transferred between people.
Evaluating a Shift in Land Ownership Rules
In a particular region, agricultural land is traditionally passed down within families. While a family has the right to farm their plot and benefit from its harvest, there are strong informal rules preventing them from selling the land to anyone outside their kinship group or using it as security to obtain a loan from a bank. Based on an analysis of these rules, what is the most likely economic outcome for this region?
Analyzing a Nation's Economic and Energy Data
Classification of Land Tenure Systems