The fertility incentive of land tenure in Mexico.
Am J Agric Econ
; 75(5): 1249-53, 1993 Dec.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-12288622
PIP: Ejidos are communal holding groups of redistributed land expropriated (generally without compensation) from large private landowners during Mexico's post-1910 land reform. The model in this study of the "ejidal" system's influence on fertility differs from DeVany and Sanchez in providing more current data and including the following more detailed variables: the land area of ejidos and the number of ejidos, the need for children, male income, female income share, and social security coverage. The data pertains to states rather than municipalities. DeVany and Sanchez found that the ejidal system encouraged fertility, because having more children helped an ejido family retain land rights, increased its chances of gaining additional productive land, and gave it increased political power. Children also provided a means of intergenerational transfer of resources. The estimation results of this study revealed that the total proportion of land held as ejidos had a positive, significant effect on fertility. The ratio of ejidos to total number of farms was negative and significant. There was support for the hypothesis that the impact of ejidos land holdings and area was diminished when ejidos were dominant in the state. Fertility declined with the increase in unpaid workers per hectare of land. Elasticity functions were small: 0.075 on ejidal land, -0.222 on ejidal farms, and -0.045 on workers. A positive significant demographic effect on fertility was illiteracy. Infant mortality and female income share each had a negative, significant effect on fertility. Insignificant variables were male income, social security coverage, and the dummy for northern states. There have been changes in the Mexican ejidal system. These changes and the availability of farm labor are expected to reduce urban and rural fertility differentials.^ieng
Key words
Agricultural Development; Americas; Demographic Factors; Developing Countries; Development Policy; Economic Factors; Fertility; Fertility Determinants; Interdisciplinary Studies; Land Tenure; Latin America; Mexico; Models, Theoretical; North America; Policy; Population; Population Dynamics; Rural Development; Socioeconomic Factors
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Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Public Policy
/
Research
/
Socioeconomic Factors
/
Agriculture
/
Fertility
/
Models, Theoretical
Type of study:
Health_economic_evaluation
/
Prognostic_studies
Aspects:
Determinantes_sociais_saude
/
Equity_inequality
Country/Region as subject:
Mexico
Language:
En
Journal:
Am J Agric Econ
Year:
1993
Document type:
Article
Country of publication:
United States