Poverty reduction through land transfers? The World Bank’s titling reforms and the making of “subsistence” agriculture

•World Bank advocates land reform as crucial pro-poor policy.•Results of land reforms in post-communist countries have at best been mixed.•Mixed record might be due to conflicting World Bank objectives: poverty reduction and entrepreneurship promotion.•World Bank reports change from understanding po...

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Veröffentlicht in:World development 2020-11, Vol.135, p.105058, Article 105058
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description •World Bank advocates land reform as crucial pro-poor policy.•Results of land reforms in post-communist countries have at best been mixed.•Mixed record might be due to conflicting World Bank objectives: poverty reduction and entrepreneurship promotion.•World Bank reports change from understanding poverty as lack of assets to poverty as due to informal arrangements.•The study analyses World Bank reports on Moldova, Romania, Tajikistan, and Ukraine. The World Bank emphasizes land reform as a key pro-poor intervention, expecting the transfer of land to the rural poor to trigger a straight transition from poverty and subsistence to entrepreneurial and commercial smallholder farming. This article asks how and why World Bank prescriptions change in response to developments on the ground that contradict initial expectations, to show that the transition to commercialization is hardly a straight one, as it involves contradictory elements. It builds on an analysis of close to twenty years of World Bank reports on land reform in four post-communist countries to show how and why the transfer of land and commercialization end up contradicting rather than mutually supporting each other. The analysis shows that as a result of this contradiction, WB-inspired policies prioritize commercialization over poverty reduction, and their underlying understanding of poverty has changed from poverty as lack of farmland to poverty as lack of alternatives to farming. For the World Bank the problem in these countries is not so much the failure of having pro-poor results, but the decreasing control over smallholders, perceived to have responded to “insufficient” reforms by withdrawing from “markets” into “subsistence”. Yet the analysis further suggests that even though presently seen as a sign of underdevelopment, the “subsistence” capacity of local populations following land transfers was in earlier reports encouraged as it was believed to have the effect of supporting the commercialization of the sector and relieving welfare systems. This aspect of reforms is now relatively rarely mentioned and “subsistence” is assumed to be an effect of anything but reforms, cast instead as a sign of insufficient market creation.
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source PAIS Index; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Agricultural land
Commercialization
Communism
Communist societies
Economic underdevelopment
Farming
Intervention
Land reform
Local population
Markets
Perceived control
Post-communist Europe and Central Asia
Postcommunist societies
Poverty
Prescription drugs
Reduction
Rural areas
Rural poverty
Small farms
Smallholders
Subsistence
Welfare
World Bank
title Poverty reduction through land transfers? The World Bank’s titling reforms and the making of “subsistence” agriculture
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