"Three Essays on Agrarian
Contracts.".
by Bellemare, Marc F.
Cornell University. Outstanding Ph.D. Dissertation Award.
This dissertation presents three essays on agrarian contracts. In
the first essay, I broaden the theory of share tenancy by developing two
original models to account for the emergence of reverse share tenancy
contracts, that is, sharecropping contracts between a poor landlord and
a rich tenant. The first model explains reverse share tenancy as a
result of asset risk, while the second model explains reverse share
tenancy as a result of price risk. I also present a third, extant model
of limited liability that could also explain the emergence of reverse
share tenancy.
In the second essay, I take the models developed in the first essay
to field data from Lac Alaotra, Madagascar. I develop a discrete choice
empirical framework that allows me to test between theories of reverse
share tenancy by considering first the decision to lease out versus the
decision to exploit one's own plot of land, and then the choice
between a fixed rent or a sharecropping contract, conditional on having
first chosen to lease out. After controlling for plot, landlord, and
tenant characteristics, I find that while the asset risk and limited
liability explanations explain the emergence of sharecropping in Lac
Alaotra, the asset risk, price risk, and limited liability explanations
all account for the emergence of reverse share tenancy.
In the third essay, I study the effects of monitoring in contracts
between an exporting firm and agricultural producers in Madagascar.
Using a principal-agent framework that incorporates both moral hazard
and adverse selection, I derive testable implication about the shape of
the contracts. I then develop an empirical framework that first allows
me to estimate the level of technical inefficiency of each agent, given
the nature of the data, and then to control for adverse selection in
testing for the effect of monitoring. I find that monitoring has no
statistically significant effect at the margin, but that it has an
economically significant negative effect on yield, in the sense that it
decreases the average agent's yield. Rather than constitute a
rejection of incentive theory, this seems to indicate a specification
error or an endogeneity problem with the monitoring variable in the
contracted crop production function that my instrumenting strategy
unfortunately cannot overcome.
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