Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties
This paper examines the effect of an improvement in property rights on a local economy. It uses the case of First Nations' modern treaties. These treaties are an important institutional reform that clarifies ownership of land and natural resources near Aboriginal communities. Using confidential...
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ftrepec:oai:RePEc:sfu:sfudps:dp14-02 2023-05-15T16:15:21+02:00 Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties Fernando M. Aragon http://www.sfu.ca/econ-research/RePEc/sfu/sfudps/dp14-02.pdf unknown http://www.sfu.ca/econ-research/RePEc/sfu/sfudps/dp14-02.pdf preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:31:18Z This paper examines the effect of an improvement in property rights on a local economy. It uses the case of First Nations' modern treaties. These treaties are an important institutional reform that clarifies ownership of land and natural resources near Aboriginal communities. Using confidential micro-data, I find evidence of a positive impact of modern treaties on real household income. The effect is driven by employment income and spreads among workers in industries not directly affected by the reform. I also find an increase in real wages and housing costs. These results are consistent with property right reforms creating a positive demand shock that affects the whole local economy. This is a yet understudied mechanism through which better property rights can generate positive local spillovers. property rights, institutions, local development Report First Nations RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) |
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This paper examines the effect of an improvement in property rights on a local economy. It uses the case of First Nations' modern treaties. These treaties are an important institutional reform that clarifies ownership of land and natural resources near Aboriginal communities. Using confidential micro-data, I find evidence of a positive impact of modern treaties on real household income. The effect is driven by employment income and spreads among workers in industries not directly affected by the reform. I also find an increase in real wages and housing costs. These results are consistent with property right reforms creating a positive demand shock that affects the whole local economy. This is a yet understudied mechanism through which better property rights can generate positive local spillovers. property rights, institutions, local development |
format |
Report |
author |
Fernando M. Aragon |
spellingShingle |
Fernando M. Aragon Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties |
author_facet |
Fernando M. Aragon |
author_sort |
Fernando M. Aragon |
title |
Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties |
title_short |
Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties |
title_full |
Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties |
title_fullStr |
Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties |
title_full_unstemmed |
Do better property rights improve local income?: Evidence from First Nations' treaties |
title_sort |
do better property rights improve local income?: evidence from first nations' treaties |
url |
http://www.sfu.ca/econ-research/RePEc/sfu/sfudps/dp14-02.pdf |
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First Nations |
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First Nations |
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http://www.sfu.ca/econ-research/RePEc/sfu/sfudps/dp14-02.pdf |
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1766001096845688832 |