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travel time remain small. A 10% increase in travel time to themarket increases
agricultural landby1.6%.
This finding that travel time has modest effects on agricultural decisions in
Forest Reserves of Chiang Mai is consistent with other studies of the region:
Cropper et al. (1999) find that a 10% increase in road density leads to a 2%
decrease in forest cover inNorth Thailand. Cropper et al. (2001) find that a 10%
increase in travel timeto themarket leads toa2.4%decrease inforestedarea in the
forest areasofNorthThailand.Similarly inNorth-eastThailand,Panayatou (1991)
finds that changes in roaddensity have an insignificant impact.
Onepolicyconclusionfromthis is that roadbuildingmaynothaveadeleterious
effect on forest cover in this area. This is different fromwhat has been found in
other parts of the world. To the extent that roads provide increased access to
services and markets, improving access within Forest Reserves might help to
alleviate poverty without affecting forests. However this result should also be
treatedwith caution.34
8.6.3 PropertyRights
In this study, I make a distinction betweenNPR villages andAPR villages. It is
important tomake thisdistinction:villageswithnosecureproperty rightsare likely
to bemore remote andpoorer thanvillages that have ambiguousproperty rights.
Animportanteffect in thestudy is thatvillageswithnoproperty rightsare likely
to likely to cultivate their land less intensively (being in anNPR village reduces
intensityofcultivationby71percentagepoints).Howevermagnitudesof impactof
the twomainvariables– travel timeandpopulation–oncroppingdecisionsarenot
verydifferent for the twogroupsofvillages.Particularly, travel time tomarkethas
anegligibleeffectonupland ricecultivationandagricultural land inNPRvillages.
Themixed evidence is explained by the fact that the distinction between the two
groupswith respect to their property rights is not sharp.Villageswith noproperty
rights (NPR villages) are located in the same region as those with ambiguous
property rights and are likely to behave similarly. Feder et al. (1988a, b) in their
study of Forest Reserves inNortheast Thailand show that villageswithout secure
property rights are less likely to invest in land. This may help to explain the
significantly lower intensity of cultivation in NPR villages. They also conclude
that secureproperty rightsallowbetter access tocredit. In this study thedistinction
34Therandomeffectsestimators in thestudyreflectprimarilycross-sectionalvariation in thedata.
Differences ineffectsof transportationcostscouldthusbepickingupdifferencesbetweenlocation
of villages.
8 UsingMixedMethods toAssessTrade-OffsBetweenAgriculturalDecisions. . . 149
Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Titel
- Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Autoren
- Juha I. Uitto
- Jyotsna Puri
- Rob D. van den Berg
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-43702-6
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 365
- Schlagwörter
- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, Climate Change/ Climate Change Impacts, Environmental Management
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima