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regional training Land Policies as an Impediment to Investment: Evidence from FIAS Case Studies Land Policies & Legal Empowerment of the Poor November 2-3, 2006, Washington DC FIAS 1 1 Why do we study land? Many interest groups are looking at land through specialized lenses and work towards the implementation of particular land policies. BUT limited focus on land from PSD perspective Urban/Rural Development Financial Sector Land Policy Land thematic Group (Especially, limited discussion based on developing countries experience) Environment and Natural Resources Social Development 2 Securing property rights encourages private investment Investor surveys: access to land is a major constraint to operations Doingbusiness 2007: large economic benefits can be reached from protecting property rights McKinsey (1991-2004): land market issues are major barriers to investment and competition in more than half the economic sectors (e.g. retail, housing and tourism) 3 Land has been a major obstacle to investment in many countries Percentage of respondents claiming that procedures for accessing the land are an obstacle for their business operation and growth 100.0 89.3 90.0 81.3 80.0 72.9 71.0 69.2 70.0 58.2 60.0 54.9 53.8 50.0 52.0 50.6 44.1 41.5 40.0 32.7 30.4 30.0 20.0 10.0 a Za m bi Fa so in a Bu rk ga nd a U Ka za hs ta n M ac ed on ia Ar m en ia Bu lg ar ia Yu go sl av ia ha na G Se ne ga l C ap e V er de Al ba ni a Ve ne zu el a R us si a 0.0 Percentages are calculated on the base of respondents giving an answer to this question. Respondents had an option not to answer, which usually means that they had no experience with land obtaining or no need for land. Overall the share of non responding businesses is 41.4%. Source: ARCS 4 Harder to register property in poor countries Days 34 116 4.8 OECD: High income 51 East Asia & Pacific 54 Middle East & North Africa 56 South Asia 62 133 Percentage of property value 4.2 6.8 6.1 5.6 Latin America & Caribbean Europe & Central Asia Sub-Saharan Africa 3.2 14.4 5 Source: Doing Business database Examples illustrating reform efforts to overcome land obstacles Issues: Concerns: Land availability • State owned land 1. Is land available and at what price? • Tribal Communal land • Ownership/use restrictions • Zoning/planning • Property tax (rate & coverage) Land rights 2. What are my rights? Are my property rights secure? • Titling system • Registration process • Collaterals • Transfer of property rights • Dispute resolution mechanisms Land development procedures 3. Time and cost of land related procedures? Selected Case Studies • Shenzhen (China) • Red Sea (Egypt) • Hong Kong •Vietnam • Ngamiland (Botswana) • Makuleke (SA) • Mozambique • Peru • Thailand •Location permits • Construction/building permits • EIA • Utility connections • Property tax (administration) • Novgorod (Russia) • Cape Town (SA) 6 Russia: Getting access to land can be extremely time consuming and costly Flowchart of the procedure for allocation of land plot for business use (Nizhny Novgorod) Document Issuing Authority Application to the Department of Economy and Planning Approving authority Committee for land resources and land use planning Construction Passport Preliminary technical specifications for preliminary approval of project design and connection to engineering infrastructure Department of Economy and Planning Preliminary lease contact Sketch of the location of the structure Department of Economy and Planning Head of Municipal Administration Head Directorate for Architecture and City Planning Project cost estimate Head Directorate for Architecture and City Planning Draft of the Approval of the Local Administration Head for the construction/reconstruction permit Sanitary-Epidemiological Inspection Lease agreement for the land plot for the period of construction/reconstruction Head of Municipal Administration State Fire Inspection Registration of the land lease contract in the Book of Land Registry Draft of the Approval of the Local Administration Head for the Leasing contract on the Lease of land plot Obtaining of the proof of lease and the lease contract (a.k.a. registration of the lease in the Book of Land Registry) Committee for land resources and land use planning State Judicial Committee Total time: 273 days 7 Source: FIAS Russia: Longer bureaucratic delays are associated with fewer privatizations No. Sales Time required to complete procedure (log scale) 8 Russia: Higher complexity and higher fees are associate with more frequent bribes Level of unofficial payments Effect of procedure cost and complexity of the level of unofficial payments 0.39 0.40 0.25 0.30 0.20 0.12 0.10 High complexity 0.00 0.00 Low complexity Low cost High cost Official costs of procedures per stage Complexity of procedures 9 Vietnam land program Background • Vietnam is in a protracted period of economic transition after 1986 ‘Doi Moi’ reforms • Relatively good investment climate but land remains problem Basic Land Issues • Land market a field of tension between growing private sector and state ownership of all land Following land issues impede PSD: •Limited availability •High prices •Unclear security of tenure •No market-oriented, long term leases IFC study of informality showed that 80% of firms surveyed would expand if land were available 10 Vietnam land program What are the obstacles? What is being done? • Strict and complex land administration system • Land Law, 2003 aims for efficiency of a true land market despite all land being state owned – not fully acheived • Land difficult to obtain / poor allocation by state • Formal process costly and time consuming • Unclear that formal registered possession confers security benefits • Gov VN has asked FIAS to assess the impact of Land Law on PSD • FIAS implementing a multi-year program to strengthen the Land Law and the administration of business access / rights to land 11 Three Southern African case studies Tribes/ Local Community • • • • Strategic Investors • Long-term investment • Efficient process • “Good citizen” status Employment Income Social development Cultural preservation The State • Strategic sector growth • Sustainable development • Environment protection • Social development 12 Shenzhen - China’s “incubator” for land market reforms 13 To Conclude: 1. Land related constraints present a major impediment to investors. 2. Land problems are complex and country specific; they need to be dealt with accordingly. 3. Fundamental land system reforms require sustainable efforts over time. In the meantime, countries should and could explore practical and interim solutions to help overcome the difficulties in providing land to investors in the transitional period. 4. There is a further need to fill the knowledge gap on reform experience in developing countries. 5. Final solution design requires collective efforts of all relevant departments within the WBG, and with our clients. 14