Resistance to the Regulation of Common Resources in Rural Tunisia

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Date

July 31, 2014

Authors

Xiaoying Liu, Mare Sarr, and Timothy Swanson

Publication

Working Paper

Reading time

1 minute

We examine the effect of the introduction of uniform water-charging for aquifer management and provide evidence using a survey-based choice experiment of agricultural water users in rural Tunisia. Theoretically, we show that the implementation of the proposed second-best regulation would result both in efficiency gains and in distributional effects in favour of small landholders. Empirically, we find that resistance to the introduction of an effective water-charging regime is greatest amongst the largest landholders. Resistance to the regulation of common resources may be rooted in the manner in which heterogeneity might determine the distributional impact of different management regimes.

Authors

Xiaoying Liu

Mare Sarr

Timothy Swanson

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