Incentives in water management reform: assessing the effect on water use, production, and poverty in the Yellow River Basin

The overall goal of our paper is to better understand water management reform in China's rural communities, especially focusing on the effect that improving incentives to water managers will have on the nation's water resources and the welfare of the rural population. To pursue this goal,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment and development economics 2005-12, Vol.10 (6), p.769-799
Hauptverfasser: WANG, JINXIA, XU, ZHIGANG, HUANG, JIKUN, ROZELLE, SCOTT
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creator WANG, JINXIA
XU, ZHIGANG
HUANG, JIKUN
ROZELLE, SCOTT
description The overall goal of our paper is to better understand water management reform in China's rural communities, especially focusing on the effect that improving incentives to water managers will have on the nation's water resources and the welfare of the rural population. To pursue this goal, the paper has three objectives. First, we track the evolution of water management reform and seek to identify the incentive mechanisms that encourage water managers to more efficiently use water. Second, we identify the impact on crop water use of the incentives provided to water managers during reform. Since we are also interested in the possible negative consequences of an incentive-led water management reform strategy, the paper also explores how changes in incentives also affect agricultural production, farmer income, and poverty. Based on a random sample of 51 villages, 189 farmers, and 378 plots in four large irrigation districts in Ningxia and Henan provinces, both provinces in China's Yellow River Basin, our results show that in our sample areas the two main forms of water management reform, Water User Associations and contracting, have begun to systematically replace traditional forms of collective management. Our analysis demonstrates, however, that it is not the nominal implementation of the reform that matters, but rather it is the creation of new management institutions that offer water managers monetary incentives that lead to water savings. Importantly, given China's concerns about national food production and poverty alleviation, the reductions in water, at least in our sample sites, do not lead to reductions in either production or income, and do not increase the incidence of poverty.
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Dev. Econ</addtitle><date>2005-12</date><risdate>2005</risdate><volume>10</volume><issue>6</issue><spage>769</spage><epage>799</epage><pages>769-799</pages><issn>1355-770X</issn><eissn>1469-4395</eissn><abstract>The overall goal of our paper is to better understand water management reform in China's rural communities, especially focusing on the effect that improving incentives to water managers will have on the nation's water resources and the welfare of the rural population. To pursue this goal, the paper has three objectives. First, we track the evolution of water management reform and seek to identify the incentive mechanisms that encourage water managers to more efficiently use water. Second, we identify the impact on crop water use of the incentives provided to water managers during reform. Since we are also interested in the possible negative consequences of an incentive-led water management reform strategy, the paper also explores how changes in incentives also affect agricultural production, farmer income, and poverty. Based on a random sample of 51 villages, 189 farmers, and 378 plots in four large irrigation districts in Ningxia and Henan provinces, both provinces in China's Yellow River Basin, our results show that in our sample areas the two main forms of water management reform, Water User Associations and contracting, have begun to systematically replace traditional forms of collective management. Our analysis demonstrates, however, that it is not the nominal implementation of the reform that matters, but rather it is the creation of new management institutions that offer water managers monetary incentives that lead to water savings. Importantly, given China's concerns about national food production and poverty alleviation, the reductions in water, at least in our sample sites, do not lead to reductions in either production or income, and do not increase the incidence of poverty.</abstract><cop>Cambridge, UK</cop><pub>Cambridge University Press</pub><doi>10.1017/S1355770X05002524</doi><tpages>31</tpages></addata></record>
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source PAIS Index; Cambridge Journals; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Agricultural management
Agricultural policy
Agricultural production
Agriculture
China (People's Republic)
Developing countries
Development economics
Economic reform
Economic theory
Environmental economics
Environmental impact
Farmers
Financial management
Food production
Incentives
Irrigation
Irrigation districts
Irrigation management
Irrigation systems
Irrigation water
LDCs
Leadership
Managers
Poverty
Public administration
Reforms
Resource management
River basins
Rivers
Rural areas
Rural populations
Statistical analysis
Studies
Surface water
Water consumption
Water management
Water resources
Water shortages
Water use
Yellow river
title Incentives in water management reform: assessing the effect on water use, production, and poverty in the Yellow River Basin
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