Public land leasing and the changing roles of local government in urban china
Since late 1980s China's urban land use began to change from administrative allocation to public land leasing. Based on the assumptions of fiscal decentralization and growth of private economy, this paper provides another perspective on public land leasing in addition to the well-known efficien...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Annals of regional science 2005-06, Vol.39 (2), p.353-373 |
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description | Since late 1980s China's urban land use began to change from administrative allocation to public land leasing. Based on the assumptions of fiscal decentralization and growth of private economy, this paper provides another perspective on public land leasing in addition to the well-known efficiency of market allocation of land resource. My focus is on the endogenous evolution of local public finance due to rent capitalization. Especially, I model a two-sector urban economy and a multi-task local government that allocates its effort to maximize fiscal revenue. The findings indicate that complete wage capitalization under administrative allocation of land contributes to the pressure on local governments to look for alternative revenue source. Public land leasing helps to include private firms into local public finance and re-orient local governments' interest from SOEs to public goods provision. A simple test on the institutional change shows the efficiency of public land leasing relative to the old system. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s00168-005-0241-1 |
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Based on the assumptions of fiscal decentralization and growth of private economy, this paper provides another perspective on public land leasing in addition to the well-known efficiency of market allocation of land resource. My focus is on the endogenous evolution of local public finance due to rent capitalization. Especially, I model a two-sector urban economy and a multi-task local government that allocates its effort to maximize fiscal revenue. The findings indicate that complete wage capitalization under administrative allocation of land contributes to the pressure on local governments to look for alternative revenue source. Public land leasing helps to include private firms into local public finance and re-orient local governments' interest from SOEs to public goods provision. A simple test on the institutional change shows the efficiency of public land leasing relative to the old system. 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Based on the assumptions of fiscal decentralization and growth of private economy, this paper provides another perspective on public land leasing in addition to the well-known efficiency of market allocation of land resource. My focus is on the endogenous evolution of local public finance due to rent capitalization. Especially, I model a two-sector urban economy and a multi-task local government that allocates its effort to maximize fiscal revenue. The findings indicate that complete wage capitalization under administrative allocation of land contributes to the pressure on local governments to look for alternative revenue source. Public land leasing helps to include private firms into local public finance and re-orient local governments' interest from SOEs to public goods provision. A simple test on the institutional change shows the efficiency of public land leasing relative to the old system. 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land leasing and the changing roles of local government in urban china</title><author>Deng, F Frederic</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c428t-203a55039879ca6a25dd9e1f5c8febae7fa01e09cef920145a6de3bce7cfa5103</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2005</creationdate><topic>China</topic><topic>China (People's Republic)</topic><topic>Decentralization</topic><topic>Economic reform</topic><topic>Finance</topic><topic>Fiscal administration</topic><topic>Ground leases</topic><topic>Land</topic><topic>Land reform</topic><topic>Land resources</topic><topic>Land use</topic><topic>Leasing</topic><topic>Local government</topic><topic>Ownership</topic><topic>Privatization</topic><topic>Property rights</topic><topic>Property taxes</topic><topic>Public finance</topic><topic>Public lands</topic><topic>Regional 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government in urban china</atitle><jtitle>The Annals of regional science</jtitle><date>2005-06-01</date><risdate>2005</risdate><volume>39</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>353</spage><epage>373</epage><pages>353-373</pages><issn>0570-1864</issn><eissn>1432-0592</eissn><abstract>Since late 1980s China's urban land use began to change from administrative allocation to public land leasing. Based on the assumptions of fiscal decentralization and growth of private economy, this paper provides another perspective on public land leasing in addition to the well-known efficiency of market allocation of land resource. My focus is on the endogenous evolution of local public finance due to rent capitalization. Especially, I model a two-sector urban economy and a multi-task local government that allocates its effort to maximize fiscal revenue. The findings indicate that complete wage capitalization under administrative allocation of land contributes to the pressure on local governments to look for alternative revenue source. Public land leasing helps to include private firms into local public finance and re-orient local governments' interest from SOEs to public goods provision. A simple test on the institutional change shows the efficiency of public land leasing relative to the old system. 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subjects | China China (People's Republic) Decentralization Economic reform Finance Fiscal administration Ground leases Land Land reform Land resources Land use Leasing Local government Ownership Privatization Property rights Property taxes Public finance Public lands Regional studies Rent Roles Studies Urban areas Urban policy Urban studies |
title | Public land leasing and the changing roles of local government in urban china |
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