Security of Property Rights for Whom?

Abstract

Recent research regarding property rights and economic development often treats property rights security in a country as homogeneous, although protecting the private entitlements of some can entail preventing others from claiming and controlling those same resources. This one-dimensional conception of property rights ignores the significant variation in the risk of expropriation faced by different groups in the same country. Using a new set of indicators that measures the property insecurity of ethnocultural minorities, this study finds that in many countries members of marginalized groups face significantly higher property insecurity than foreign investors and domestic elites, and that although secure property rights for elites and foreign investors may be positively related to long-run development, property rights for marginalized groups are not.

Citation

Lawson-Remer, T. Security of Property Rights for Whom? UNU-WIDER, Helsinki, Finland (2011) 35 pp. ISBN 978-92-9230-450-8 [WIDER Working Paper No. 2011/83]

Security of Property Rights for Whom?

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2011