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Local Stakeholders’ Preferences for Foreign Land Lease Design Attributes in Kenya David Jakinda Otieno & Willis Oluoch–Kosura University of Nairobi Oral.

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Presentation on theme: "Local Stakeholders’ Preferences for Foreign Land Lease Design Attributes in Kenya David Jakinda Otieno & Willis Oluoch–Kosura University of Nairobi Oral."— Presentation transcript:

1 Local Stakeholders’ Preferences for Foreign Land Lease Design Attributes in Kenya David Jakinda Otieno & Willis Oluoch–Kosura University of Nairobi Oral Presentation at the 17 th Annual World Bank Land and Poverty Conference, Washington, DC, USA; 14 – 18, March 2016

2 1. Research Context  There is huge potential of foreign land leases in economic development – food, employment, capital for infrastructure and other services.  But lack of or inadequate stakeholder consultations in foreign land deals leads to – displacement of land owners, poor/non-compensation, resource use conflicts & disruption of investments.  Lack of empirical insights on key features that should be included in a participatory lease design.

3 2. Methodology  Setting: Tana Delta area in coastal Kenya with various foreign land lease deals  Focus group discussion with key stakeholders in the land system – to understand & validate land lease attributes  Choice experiment design of land leases options  Random survey of 200 farmers  Random Parameter logit (RPL) analysis of preferences for foreign lease design attributes

4 Land Lease Attributes in the Design AttributePossible Levels Lease duration in years15; 25; 55 Renewability of the lease (after negotiations)Yes; no % of household land to be leased10%; 25%; 50% Employment to household membersCasual; permanent Payment of land per ha (% of market price)50%; 75%;100%

5 Example of Lease Options AttributeLease type ALease type BLease type C (Neither A nor B) Lease duration (years)5525 RenewabilityYesNo Lease size (% of land)50%10% EmploymentFormal Payment75%100% Which ONE would you choose?

6 3. Results - Over 60% of farmers had positive preferences for all lease attributes except long lease duration of 55 years

7 Marginal Willingness to Accept (WTA) estimates for land lease attributes AttributeWillingness to accept compensation (WTA) in Kenya Shillings (Kshs) t-ratiop-value Short lease duration4547 (2682 to 6412) 2.440.015 Long lease duration-3162 (-4722 to -1603) -2.030.043 Renewable lease2363 (1350 to 3376) 2.330.020 Lease size70 (38 to 102) 2.190.029 Formal employment2687 (1629 to 3745) 2.540.011

8 Compensating Surplus for Land Lease Policy Scenarios ScenarioCompensating Surplus (Kshs) 1Short lease, non-renewable lease, 10% of land, formal employment 7933 (3.12) 2Short lease, non-renewable lease, 10% of land, casual employment 5246 (2.67) 3Medium lease, renewable lease, 25% of land, casual employment 4109 (2.75) 4Medium lease, renewable lease, 25% of land, formal employment 6797 (3.39) 5Short lease, renewable lease, 50% of land, formal employment 13090 (3.58)

9 4. Conclusions & Policy Implications  Incorporate the desired attributes in future foreign land leases  Ensure transparent lease negotiations to promote harmony between land owners and investors  To address local people’s fear of displacement, provide mechanisms for foreign investors to make full disclosure of country of origin, lease intentions & investment plans  Establish an all-stakeholder inclusive local management committee to administer the leases  Need for further insights on farmers’ perception on benefits of foreign land leases to livelihoods and development.

10 5. Acknowledgements  We are grateful to the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) Africa Initiative for funding the study from which this paper was produced.  Thanks to Prof. Magnus Jistrom, Sweden for supporting our travel to the conference through a grant from the Urban Agriculture project.


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