Moral hazard: Experimental evidence from tenancy contracts
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Oxford Academic
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Abstract
Agricultural productivity is particularly low in developing countries. Output-sharing rules that make farmers less-than-full residual claimants are seen as a potentially important driver of low agricultural productivity. We report results from a field experiment designed to estimate and understand the effects of sharecropping contracts on agricultural input choices, risk-taking, and output. The experiment induced variation in the terms of sharecropping contracts. After agreeing to pay 50% of their output to the landlord, tenants were randomized into three groups: (i) some kept 50% of their output; (ii) others kept 75%; (iii) others kept 50% of output and received a lump-sum payment at the end of their contract, either fixed or stochastic. We find that tenants with higher output shares used more inputs, cultivated riskier crops, and produced 60% more output relative to control. Income or risk exposure have at most a small effect on farm output; the increase in output should be interpreted as an incentive effect of the output-sharing rule.
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This article was published in The Quarterly Journal of Economics [©2018 Published by Oxford University Press] and the definite version is available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/qjy023 The Article's website is at: https://academic.oup.com/qje/article/134/1/281/5106373
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Journal Article