Article(electronic)May 31, 2022

The Persistence of Rural Underdevelopment: Evidence from Land Reform in Italy

In: Comparative political studies: CPS, Volume 56, Issue 1, p. 65-100

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Abstract

Patchiness in rural development remains a salient feature of many developed and developing countries that have struggled historically to overcome enormous national disparities in economic structure and well-being. This paper examines how one major, explicit rural policy ostensibly aimed at rural advancement—land reform—can impact uneven development in the countryside. It does so in Italy, where a major land reform redistributed large landholdings to individual peasant families after World War II. Based on original fine-grained data on land redistribution and a geographical regression discontinuity analysis that takes advantage of Italy's zonal land reform approach, I find that greater land reform fueled comparative underdevelopment and precarity locally over the long term. Several related mechanisms delayed development in land reform zones: a slower transition out of agriculture, lower labor mobility, and an aging demographic. These are generalizable mechanisms that could operate in other cases of land reform beyond Italy.

Languages

English

Publisher

SAGE Publications

ISSN: 1552-3829

DOI

10.1177/00104140221089653

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