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Abstract
This research investigates the efficiency and equity impacts of the cropland rental
market in rural Vietnam and attempts to identify the determinants and importance of
transaction costs impeding this market. A generalised ordered logit model with shifting
thresholds accounting for effects of transaction costs associated with market
participation was specified and estimated using pooled data extracted from the Vietnam
Household Living Standards Surveys of 2004 and 2008. The findings show that the
cropland rental market reduced imbalances in factor endowments, transferring cropland
to those households more willing and able to farm. Equity advantages were also
revealed as cropland transferred from relatively land-rich to relatively land-poor
households, allowing young farmers to ‘scale the agricultural ladder’. However, the
market is constrained by transaction costs that effect lessors and lessees differently. It is
recommended that the Vietnamese government should complete its land registration
programme and consider relaxing restrictions on the use of wetlands to grow crops other
than rice. It should also focus on improving access to all-weather roads as this
encourages participation on both sides of the rental market whereas better access to
communications infrastructure was found to promote only the supply side.