Report No. 10419-VE Venezuela Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership September 21, 1993 Country Department I Environment and Agriculture Operations Division Latin America and the Caribbean Region FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MICROGRAPHICS I . Report No: 10419 VE Type: SEC Document of-the World Bank This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization CURRENCY AND EOUIVALENT UNITS Currency Unit - Bolivar (Bs) Currency Unit January 1. 1992 US$1 Bs 47.5 Bs 1 US$0.02 Bs 1,000 US$21.05 MEASURES 1 hectare (ha) = 10,000 square meters (m2) = 2.47 acres 1 kilometer (km) = 0.62 mile (mi) 1 square kilometer (km) = 0.39 square miles = 100 ha ACRONYMS BANDAGRO Banco de Desarrollo Agricola (Agricultural Development Bank) CIARA Fundaci6n para la Capacitaci6n e Investigaci6n Aplicada a la Reforma Agraria (Foundation for Training and Applied Research for the Agrarian Reform) CORDIPLAN Oficina Central de Coordinaci6n y Planificacidn de la Presidencia de la Repiiblica (Central Coordinating and Planning Office of the Presidency) FCA Fondo de Credito Agropecuario (Agricultural and Livestock Credit Fund) IAN Instituto Agrario Nacional (National Agrarian Institute) ICAP Instiiuto de Credito Agropecuario (Agricultural and Livestock Credit Institute) LIMS Land Information Management System MAC Ministerio de Agricultura y Cria (Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock) MARNR Ministerio del Ambiente y de Recursos Naturales Renovables (Ministry of the Environment and or Renewable Natural Resources) FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Title: Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform and Rural Land Ownership Country: Venezuela Region: Latin America and the Caribbean Region Report: -yS: Class: MM/YY: Languag 10419-VE ERA Official Use 09/93 English Abstract: This report evaluates the rural land market in Venezuela, examining the impact of the land reform on land distribution and ownership and examining the impediments to an active and competitive land market. There has been a lack of progress in changing the composition of land ownership in Venezuela despite thirty years of a land reform program. Land ownership remains very concentrated. Also, the land market has failed to develop. There are three issues that inhibit the development of a land market. First, land provided under the agrarian reform program cannot be transferred by the owner thereby inhibiting entry and exit on reform land. Second, the majority of land, whether reform land or otherwise, is untitled or insufficiently titled so that the title is not marketable. Third, there are large tracts of unused land suitable for agriculture that are held by the state. Following the analysis, the report provides recommendations that would activate the land market, enhance agricultural productivity, and still meet the goals of the agrarian reform. The central recommendation involves implementing a land information management system and mapping titles into that system. This, along with changes in the title-status of agrarian reform recipients, will provide marketable titles to private landowners. The government should follow this by selling the considerable tracts of agricultural land to which it holds title. This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization. VENEZUELA: LAND MARKETS, LAND REFORM ,AND RURAL LAND OWNERSHIP TABLE OF CONTENTS GLOSSARY OF TERMS ......................................... i EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................ iv RESUMEN EJECUTIVO ......................................... ix 1. INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW A. The Objectives and Structure of the Report ............................ 1 B. The Economy of Venezuela ..................................... 2 C. The Role of Agriculture ...................................... 3 D. The History of Land Tenure .................................... 5 E. Philosophical Dimensions of Land Tenure and Reform .................... 6 F. Patterns of Land Ownership and Tenure .............................. 7 G. Current Status of the Agricultural Land Market ........................ 10 II. THE INSTITUTIONAL BASIS AND OPERATION OF THE LAND MARKET A. Conditions for a Competitive Land Market ...................... ... 13 B. The Agrarian Reform Law .................................... 13 C. Structure and Functions of IAN ................................. 14 D. Implementation of the Agrarian Reform Law ......................... 15 E. Results of Agrarian Reform .................................... 18 F. Land Titles and their Registration ................................. 21 G. Land Prices . ............................................. 22 H. Term Credit for Land ........................................ 24 III.RECOMMENDATIONS FOR STRENGTHENING THE LAND MARKET A. Land Titles . ............................................. 28 B. Changes in IAN . ........................................... 34 C. Credit .................................................. 36 D. Concluding Commnents ....................................... 37 ANNEXES Annex 1: The Agrarian Reform of 1960 .............................. 39 Annex 2: Proposed Modifications to Land Legislation ...................... 44 Annex 3: Credit for Land Acquisition ................................ 46 Annex 4: The Effects of Land Tenure ................................ 51 Annex 5: A Strategy to Improve Cadastral Information and Create a Viable Up-to-Date Cadastre in Venezuela ............................ 59 Annex 6: Successful Small Farmer Schemes in El Salvador and Dominican Republic . .. 61 Annex 7: Gini Index Values for Concentration of Land Ownership in 54 Countries in Various Years .............................. 64 MAP . ................................................. 65 This a:pot is based on the findings of a mision whM viited Venwzueg in Dee˘mber, 19"1+ MlBB;ian members were Malcolm Bale (Mission LeaJer), LIEA.'A,and Jonad Coleman, Steven Head and Stven.:".: Smith (onsultns). :X: GLOSSARY OF TERMS adverse possession A method of acquiring complete title to land as against all others, including the recorded owner, through possession over an uninterrupted period of time. Most jurisdictions require that the possession be actual, visible, open, notorious, hostile, continuous and exclusive. agraristas The name given in Venezuela to those persons (farm leaders, academics, campesino union members) who believe in the traditional, socialistic ideology of land reform. asentamiento A rural settlement. cadastre An official registry of the quantity, value and ownership of real property based on geodesy. More recently the term has been expanded to include a mapping of land for multiple purposes. The terms "multi-purpose cadastre" and "multi-purpose information system" are often used interchangeably. campesino The rural poor, whether farm workers or operators of minifundios. In this report it is used synonymously with "peasant." dotaci6n The administrative act whereby IAN awards possession and property of farm land to a person or group of persons of rural residence who are qualified subjects of the agrarian reform. ejido laWd Lanl that belonged to the municipalities at the time of colonization, along with other lands acquired by the municipalities. It generally cannot be sold or mortgaged. fee simple A title of complete ownership, which can be sold by the owner or devised to the owner's heirs. The word "fee" itself notes that the property can be inherited. "Simple" refers to the fact that there are no restrictions. geodesy A branch of mathematics concerned with the determination of the size and shape of the earth and the exact positions of points on its surface. hacienda A farm, of any commercial size, usually operated using modern inputs and some hired labor, as distinct from a lati fundio (see below). latifundio Large rural properties, farmed with traditional technology and semi- indentured servitude of the farm laborers who live on the farm. lien The security of interest created by a mortgage. A charge upon property (real or personal) to satisfy a debt. - ii - medium producers Those producers whose gross annual income obtained in agricultural activity is greater than 30,000 boliviares and less than 70,000 bolivares, provided that the farm activity is performed personally and that hired labor does not exceed 70% of the total days worked on the farm. minifundio A subsistence farm or a farm too small to be commercially viable in the sense of providing the sole source of income for its operator. optimal farm size A notional concept of farm size, not an absolute size. Formally, it is that size of farm that results when the margix al value products of all inputs used in farming are equated to their price. real property Land and buildings, along with the rights connected to the land (as distinguished from personal property and intellectual property). regularization The administrative act whereby the Directorate of the National Agrarian Institute determines the possession and limits of a certain piece of land by a qualified subject of the agrarian reform by means of the granting of a title of property. sindicato A group of landless rural workers who unite to petition .'le 'and reform agency for land to establish a raral community. small producers Those whose gross annual income, earned in agricultural ativity, does not exceed 30,000 bolivares, provided that the farm activity is performed personally with the help of his/her family. tierras baldtas Literally, bald land. Land for which no ownership has been assigned (no title given) and is therefore claimed by the federal government. title One who holds vested rights in property is said to have tide. absolute title An exclusive title, or a title which excludes all others not compatible with it. definitive tide (titulo definitivo) This is the document that is granted to beneficiaries of the agrarian reform to definitively transfer the property to the recipient. free and clear title, good title, merchantable title, marketable title These titles are all synonyms. Clear means that it is free of encumbrances. Good means that it is free of litigation or doubts. - iii - onerous title (tiulo onoroso) In civil law, title to property acquired by the giving of a valuable consideration for it, usually money, but where rights under the title are resticted. provisional title (titulo provisionale) This is the document that is originally granted to one or more beneficiaries when a parcel is given to them under the agrarian reform until a definitive title is granted. "reform" land Land that has been provided to IAN, the land reform agency, to be distributed under the Agrariap Reform Program. Torrens System A system for registration of land under which, upon the landowner's application, the court may direct the issuance of a certificate of tite. With exceptions, this certificate is conclusive as to the applicant's estate in land. Basically, it is a system of registration of land titles. The originator was Sir Richard Torrens, 1814-1884, a reformer of land law in Australia. usucaption Civil law concept similar to adverse possession usufruct Civil law concept for the right to use and enjoy the property of another. The user may not alter the substance of the property, but may use it for profit, utility and advantage. - iv - t'x: CUTIVE SUMMARY 1. In terms of the overall importance in the economy of Venezuela, agriculture is, by GDP measures, small. Agriculture and agroindustry accounts for only 6% of GDP and I % of exports. Yet agriculture in Venezuela has a political and social importance not revealed in the numbers. The rural sector contains many poor, and smallholder farming is seen by policymakers as a major means of providing economic opportunity and equity to the p Jr. The "social importance" cf farm land is a phrase that is frequently heard when discussing agriculture in Venezuela and this concept provided the initial impetus for land reform. But agriculture has a potential economic importance also. Venezuela is well endowed with agricultural land. There is considerable physical scope for expansion of the area under cultivation--more than 20 million hectares (ha). For various reasons, some of which are explored in this report, agriculture has failed to fully develop. 2. Venezuela, ; any countries in the region, has a very unequal distribution of farm lands, with control largc'. hands of a small group. Social unrest has led to pressures to change this system and resultec in Agrarian Reform Law of 1960. Under the reforms, land was provided at nominal cost to landless farm r- -kers and rural poor. Recipients of reform land have a perpetual right to farm the land. They m-ist farm it ;"ay improve it, may assign the right to heirs, but cannot "sell" the land as they do not hold a "free ,ind clear" title to it. The restriction on the sale of reform land is based on the concern that ur."- a.' nrestricted market, land ownership patterns would revert to those prior to the land reform. 3. Both supporters of the land reform, agraristas, and the market-oriented technocrats, agree that the reform has made little progress toward its main goals of providing land and economic opportunity for the rural peasant and changing the latifundio-minifundio character of Venezuelan agriculture. Over 80% of the land is still owned by less than 7% of the landholders. At the other end of the spectrum, only 8% of the land is divided among over 80% of the farm units. 4. The agrarian reform was a social and political success in that it averted a revolution, but it has not been an economic success for agriculture. The reasons that relatively little has been accomplished are: some land which has been included in the reform process has not been distributed or has not had its ownership status determined; even less land has been titled; some parcels that are given are too small to be economically viable; and very little infrastructure and technical assistance have been provided to r-Aorm beneficiaries. What land reform has accomplished for Venezuela is to satisfy part of its rural p ˘, who have been given some opportunity to produce. The challenge for policymakers is to put in place policies and incentives that would allow smallholders to evolve from subsistence to small-scale commercial farmers and to extend the opportunities for agriculture by expanding the land market. 5. To achieve these aims, the Government wishes to activate the land market in Venezuela, consistent with providing land to rural peasants and creating an efficient, market driven agricultural sector. Three immediate objectives should be to: (a) Give clear titles to reform beneficiaries and others on land of ambiguous ownership; (b) Provide access to land for the rural poor who are capable of farming; and (c) Privatize government lands suitable for agriculture. 6. The long-term objective that these lead to is the establishment of an efficient, market-driven agriculture, free to structure itself according to market forces, under open access to all who wish to participate in it. These oljectives are consistent with, and will operate well, only in conjunction with the overall policy reforms presently underway in the agricultural sector. There are four related actions that need to be undertaken to accomplish these objectives: (a) Develop a land information management system as a necessary first step to defining the area, quality, ownership, and other characteristics of the nation's endowment of land; (b) Provide marketable titles, by completing the cadastre, and "regularizing" land ownership; (c) Reformu.ate the functions of the agrarian reform agency so that it becomes a regulatory body; and (d) Implement a mechanism to increase the rate of privatizing government land. 7. Venezuela does not have a modern scientific method of identifying ownership of parcels of land. This is a prerequisite to providing clear titles and eliminating land disputes. Venezuela should establish a comprehensive land information management system (LIMS) based on a modern cadastre. Properly implemented, so that the property registry is integrated with the cadastre, this land information system can be used as a planning, monitoring and fiscal tool. A LIMS will have a positive impact on security and clarity of tenure. 8. Titling would also play an essential role in strengthening the land market. All agrarian reform land, when titled, has titles preventing fts transfer (sale or rental). At present, more than 60% of the country's land plots are thought to be without title or with non-marketable titles. These plots, lacking documentation of formal ownership, command less value than plots with formal documentation. As a result, property value is based not on the productive value of the land, but on its formality. Further, it is not possible to obtain term credit on land that does not have a marketable title. 9. As the cadastre proceeds, Venezuela should provide marketable titles for agrarian reform lands. Consolidation of landholdings into large haciendas is not a likely result of such an action as large landholdings are not necessarily more efficient than smaller landholdings. Some consolidation of suboptimai sized units would occur as determined by the market. The guiding principle is that farmers, led by market forces, not the government, should decide farm size. The government should restrict its role to assuring that the regulatory conditions exist for a well functioning market. Formal titling and resolving tenure disputes would improve the efficient functioning of a land market. This would enhance tenure security and stimulate productivity enhancing investment in agriculture. 10. The agency responsible for implementing the agrarian reform, the National Agrarian Institute (IAN), has provided about 9 million ha of land to beneficiaries, but this has had only a marginal effect on the distribution of land, farmer productivity and rural development. A few landowners still - vi - control a large share of farmland and many small farners account for a very small share of the total farmed land. The agency needs to be restructured. Many of its past activities could be assigned to the private sector while it becomes a land commission with regulatory and quasi judicial functions. The new IAN would also be responsible for regularizing land titles and supervising the sale and subdivision of government land. 11. Disputes may arise over ownership as the concordance between the local registries and the LIMS is being put in place. These disputes would need to be resolved in an expeditious and equitable manner. Different types of occupation of land will require different procedures for resolving disputes. Thie process centers on requiring local communities c determine boundaries and ownership with the assistance and adjudication of the land commission which has the authority to compensate aggrieved parties in the case of ambiguous land situations. Compensation would be in the form of a grant of land. A further aspect of the process is to regularize land ownership quickly with the minimum of social friction by providing land to those with "legitimate" claims. Finally, a modest flat land tax would be implemented in order to finance the LIMS and to discourage the holding of unused land. Solutions for different types of land are summarized below. 12. Campesinos who have been squatting on land, private or public, for a period of time, perhaps three years, and where the rightful owner has not enforced his property rights, would be given title to the parcel of land if they can prove to have farmed it, as is the case under present law. Communities of squatters on latifundios would be required to resolve disputes within themselves, with the assistance of the land commission, and present a plan to the titling authority. All landowners, including newly titled campesinos, would be required to pay a fee f&: receiving clear title. 13. Unoccupied state land suitable for agriculture should be sold to developers (who may be farmer organizations) with marketable titles or provided at nominal cost to campesinos displaced during the land regularization process. 14. On agrarian reform land which has been distributed, the present pattern of land occupancy and use reflects properties that have been abandoned and others for which informal (illegal) arrangements have been made between the parties involved. Once cadastral points have been established the local community (asentamiento) would be required to submit to the land commission a plan, agreed by the community that establisAjes ownership of plots within the area based on existing settlement/production patterns. Fee-simple ticles will then be provided and recorded on the LIMS. Where informal arrangements have been made between beneficiaries, they will be honored. Taxation of land that falls under this category would commence from the day owners obtain a marketable fee-simple title. The Land Commission would be available to provide technical guidance at local meetings where the ownership plan is being decided and to ensure the integrity of the process. But basically the responsibility for providing resolution to local disputes on reform land is the local community. 15. Other reform land has been subdivided and occupied but has not yet been issued with any type of title. This represents areas of recent occupancy where eligible farmers have been identified but have not been issued titles. Since many of these areas contain the original illegal occupants, there is likely to be disputed property and boundaries. Again, the responsibility for clarifying these situations would rest with the local organizations. The Land Commission would hear cases for those who feel seriously aggrieved. Where merit exists on both sides and good faith has been used by both, the commission may rule that the aggrieved party receive compensation from the state in the form of an equivalent plot of land in a newly developing land area. The objective of the exercise is to regularize - vii - iand titles with the minimum of social conflict and provide farming opportunities to those who wisn to have them. The purpose is not to maximize government revenue from t},e sale of its land. 16. There is another class of occupants on reform lard that may need to be treated differently. They are the large landholdings that have been invaded by politically powerful interests. Where cases such as this can be identified, then the state has a role, In the interests of social justice, to intervene. In these cases, goxernment would exercise its ownership rights to the land and offer the land for sale at auction. The present occupier would have the first right of refusal at the auctioned price less the value of the improvements that he has made. If this option is not exercised, the occupier would be compensated from the selling price for the improvements he has made. 17. Finally, there are large areas of unused or informally occupied public land, yet to - improved, that could be privatized. Those occupying the land who are using it in a ". - beneficial" way,1' and have occupied the land for (say) three years, would be given clear titie if they are willing to pay the recording fee on the land. If the land has been adversely possessed, similar to that described above, then remedies similar to those could be used. At the end of the process fee- simple titles would be recorded on the LIMS. 18. In order to dispose of state land that has not been occupied or distributed, the land would be divided into three categories: (a) land unsuitable for agriculture that should remain in reserves; (b) land suitable for agriculture that is set aside to be used by the government to compensate those with secondary claims on land; and (c) land suitable for agriculture that the state will sell within a specified time. 19. Land would be sold, under specified conditions, to developers and campesino unions at auction. The market determines the value of land and allows the selection of farmers based on the value they place on the land. The govermnent establishes the general criteria that bonded developers must follow in terms of the infrastructure they must provide, and the time over which development will occur. The developer presents a more detailed plan showing the location of infrastructure, the boundaries of each parcel, and the approximate number of farmers to be settled on the land. The developer would subdivide the land and sell it to campesinos. Private developers bidding on the land, reflecting what they know they can sell the land for (based on its productivity) will bid the market price. Owners of latifundios who are now using their land extensively, may be tempted to sell it to a developer or become a developer themselves. Tus the land market is truly activated and privatized. 20. For this outcome to result, the other necessary prerequisites of a land market are essential. Land must be documented and titling clear. That is, the cadastral and registry parts of the LIMS must be complete. Credit must be available, the regulatory functions of the government must be well defined, and the government must have undertaken an inventory of its land so that it can place the appropriate parcels on the market at the appropriate time. Privatization of suitable agricultural lands 1/ 'Socially beneficial" land use is defined in para 1.17. v 'I, I ,1 1!.,1 11 1.1.oI . - viii - would be the object of the exarcise. Making a profit from the sale for the government would be secondary but is the logical outeome of the process of allocating land to those demanding it. 21. As with all land sale programs through market mechanisms, payments due must be low enough to permit repayment out of the income earned by farming. Success also requires governments and lenders to abandon the view that small-holder land buyers must be kept on the land even if they do not earn enough money to meet their debt service. Those who suffer personal misfortunes or are not successful farmers, must be encouraged to transfer their land to another campesino and seek )ther employment. 22. An agrarian reform of sizable dimensions, with very positive distributional and o atput results, could emerge. The program would be private and free of paternalism. It would represen. a dramatic attempt to regularize land titles, activate the land market, solve credit constraints, privatize state land, and stimulate agricultural growth. it would be a major step along the path of economic development for Venezuela. - ix - RESUMEN EJECUTIVO 1. En terminos de la importancia en la economfa venezolana, su agricultura es pequefla en relaci6n al PIB. La agricultura y la agroindustria representan s6lo 6% del PIB y 1% de las exportaciones. Sin embargo, las cifras no revelan la importancia polftica y social de la agricultuia venezolana. El sector rural presenta mucha pobreza, y los poifticos consideran la pequefha producci6n agrfcola como una vfa impoitante para proporcionar oportunidades econ6micas y equidad a los pobres. El uso de la frase "importancia social" de la tierra agrfcola es frecuente en discusiones sobre la agricultura venezolana; este concepto incentiv6 la reforma agraria. La agricultura tambien tiene un potencial econdmico importanre. El patrimonio de tierras agrfcolas en Venezuela favorece la ampliaci6n del area cultivada - m$s de 20 millones de hectareas. Por varias razones, algunas de ellas analizadas en el presente informe, la agricultura no ha sido plenamente desarrollada. 2. Como ocurre en muchos otros pafses de la regi6n, la distribuci6n desigual de tierras agrfcolas en Venezuela esta en manos de un grupo pequefho. La inquietud social ha Ilevado a presiunes para cambiar este sistema y result6 en la Ley de Re.forma Agraria de 1960. Bajo estas reformas, se proporcion6 tierra a costo mfnimo a los trabajadores agrfcolas sin tierras y a los campesinos pobres. Los beneficiarics de la reforma agraria gozan del derecho perpetuo de cultivar su terreno. Deben cultivarlo, pueden mejorarlo o cederlo, pero no pueden "vender" su terreno por no tener un tftulo puro y simple. Esta restriccidn sobre la venta de terrenos sujetos a la reforma agraria, se basa en la inquietud de que bajo un mercado s:n restricciones, los patrones de propiedad de tierras revertirfan a aquellos patrones en vigor antes de la reforma. 3. Tanto los agraristas como los tecn6cratab .on orientaci6n comercial, coinciden que la reforma ha logrado poco exito en sus principales metas de proporcionar tierras y oportunidades econ6micas a los campesinos y cambiar el caracter latifundista/minifundista de la agricultura venezolana. Mas de 80% de la tierra sigue en manos de menos de 7% de los terratenientes. Al otro extremo, s6lo 8% de la tierra esta dividida entre mas de 80% de las unidades agrfcolas. 4. La reforma agraria constituy6 un exito social y polftico por evitar una revoluci6n, pero no ha sido un exito econ6mico para la agricultura. Las razones de los pocos logros incluyen: falta distribuir o determinar la propiedad de algunas tierras incluidas en la reforma agraria; ain menos tierra ha sido titulada; algunas de las parcelas no son econ6micamente viables por ser muy pequeflas; asimismo, se ha suministrado muy poca infraestructura y asistencia t&enica a los beneficiarios de la reforma. La reforma agraria venezolana ha logrado satisfacer parte de la poblaci6n rural que ha tenido alguna posibilidad de producir. El reto para los polfticos es implementar polfticas e incentivos que permitirfan convertir a los pequefios agricultores de subsistencia en productores comerciales de pequefia escala, extendiendo las oportunidades agrfcolas al ampliar el mercado de tierras. 5. Para lograr estos objetivos, el Gobierno venezolano piensa activar el mercado de tierras, en consistencia con la otorgaci6n de tierras a los campesinos y la creaci6n de un eficiente sector agrfcola de mercado, con tres objetivos inmediatos: x - (a) otorgar tftulos seguros a los beneficiarios de la reforma agraria y otros sobre tierras de propiedad ambigua; (b) permitir el acceso a tierras a los campesinos capaces de cultivar; y (c) privatizar las tierras pdblicas que sean factibles para la agricultura. 6. El objetivo a largo plazo serfa el establecimiento de una eficiente agricultura de mercado con la libertad de estructurarse segLn las fuerzas del mercado, de libre acceso a toda persona que quiera participar en ella. Estos objetivos son consistentes con las actuales reformas poifticas globales en el sector agrfcola, y s6!o operaran en conjunto con ellas, tomandose cuatro acciones afines: (a) desarrollar un sistema de administraci6n de datos sobre tierras, como un primer paso importante en la definici6n del area, la calidad, la propiedad y otras caracterfsticas del patrimonio nacional de tierras; (b) proporcionar tftulos negociables, completando el catastro y regularizando la propiedad de tierras; (c) reformular las funciones de la agencia de reforma agraria para convertirla en 6rgano regulador; e (d) implementar un mecanismo para aumentar el fndice de privatizaci6n de tierras pdlblicas. 7. Venezuela no cuenta con un mdtodo cientffico moderno para identificar la propiedad de parcelas, un requisito para otorgar tftulos seguros y eliminar el litigio sobre tierras. Venezuela debera establecer un amplio sistema de administraci6n de datos sobre tierras (LIMS) basado en un catastro moderno. Debidamente implementado, e integrado con el catastro, este sistema de propiedades podra ser usado como instrumnento fiscal, de planificaci6n y monitoreamiento, y tendra un impacto positivo sobre la seguridad y claridad de la tenencia. 8. La titulaci6n tambien tendrfa un papel esencial al fortalecer el mercado de tieiras. Toda tierra sujeta a la reforma agraria tiene tftulos que prohfben su transferencia (mediante venta o arrendamiento). En la actualidad, se estima que a 60% de las parcelas del pafs les faltan tftulos o tienen t(tulos no-negociables. Estas parcelas, sin documentaci6n sobre su propiedad formal, tienen menos valor que aquellas con documentaci6n formal. Como resultado, el valor de una propiedad no esta basado en el valor productivo del terreno, sino en su formalidad. Ademas, no es posible obtener credito a plazos sobre terrenos sin tftulo negociable. 9. Al proceder con el catastro, Venezuela debera otorgar tftulos negociables para tierras sujetas a la reforma agraria. No es probable que la consolidaci6n de tierras en grandes haciendas sea un resultado de tal acci6n porque las grandes propiedades no son necesariamente mas eficientes que las pequefhas. Ocurrirfa alguna consolidaci6n de unidades de tamaflo inferior, determinada por el mercado. El principio fundamental es que los agricultores, influenciados por las fuerzas del mercado y no las del gobierno, deberfan determinar el tamaflo de la propiedad. La funcidn del gobierno deberfa limitarse a asegurar que existen condiciones reguladoras para el buen funcionamiento del mercado. La titulaci6n formal y la resoluci6n de litigios sobre la tenencia, mejorarfan el fincionamiento eficiente de un mercado de tierras, aumentando la seguridad de tenencia y fomentando la productividad y las inversiones agrfcolas. - xi - 10. El Instituto Agrario Nacional (IAN), responsable por la implementacidn de la reforma agraria, ha otorgado unas 9 millones de hectareas a los beneficiarios, pero con efectos marginales sobre la distribuci6n de tierras, la productividad de los agricultores, y el desarrollo rural. Algunos grandes terratenientes todavfa controlan una proporcidn importante de la tierra agrfcola, y muchos agricultores pequefios s6lo representan una proporci6n mfnima del total de tierras cultivadas. La agencia deberfa ser reestructurada, asignando muchas de sus actividades anteriores al sector privado mientras se convierta en una comisi6i de tierras con funciones reguladoras y semi-judiciales. El nuevo IAN tambien serfa responsable por regularizar tftulos y supervisar la venta y sub-divisi6n de tierras fiscales. 11. Podrfan surgir litigios sobre la propiedad, durante la implementaci6n de la concordancia entre los registros locales y el LIMS. Tales litigios deberan ser resueltos de manera expedita y justa. Los diferentes tipos de ocupaci6n de tierras requeriran distintos procedimientos para la resoluci6n de litigios. Este proceso esta centrado en el requisito de que las comunidades locales determinen los lfmites y la propiedad con la asistencia y el fallo de la comisi6n de tierras que tiene la autoridad de compensar a las partes agraviadas en caso de situaciones de tierra ambiguas, en forma de una otorgaci6n de tierra. Otro aspecto del proceso es la rapida regularizacion de la propiedad con un mfnimo de conflicto social, proporcionando tierras a demandantes "legftimos". Finalmente, un modesto impuesto fijo serfa implementado para financiar el LIMS y no fomentar la propiedad de tierras baldfas. Se presenta a continuaci6n soluciones para cuatro distintas clases de tierras. 12. Los campesinos que hayan ocupado ilegalmente un terreno, privado o pilblico, por un perfodo de quizA tres afios, cuyo propietario no haya ejercido sus derechos de propiedad, recibirfan el tftulo de la parcela si pueden dar pruebas de haberla cultivado, como es el caso bajo la ley actual. Las comunidades de ocupantes ilegales en latifundios tendrfan que resolver los litigios entre sf, con la asistencia de la comisi6n de tierras, y presentar un plan a la autoridad de titulaci6n. Todos los propietarios de tierras, incluyendo los campesinos con nuevos tftulos, tendrfan que pagar honoiarios por recibir un tftulo seguro. 13. Las tierras pdblicas baldfas con potencial agrfcola deberAn ser vendidas a empresarios (que pueden ser organizaciones de agricultores) con tftulos negociables u otorgados a un costo mfnimo a los campesinos desplazados durante el proceso de regularizaci6n de la tierra. 14. Respecto a las tierras de la reforma agraria, el actual patron de ocupaci6n y utilizaci6n de las mismas refleja las propiedades abandonadas y otras para las que arreglos informales (ilegales) hayan sido acordados entre las partes involucradas. Una vez establecidos los puntos catastrales, el asentamiento debera proponer un plan a la comision de tierras, acordado por la comunidad, estableciendo la propiedad de parcelas dentro del Area. Tftulos de dominio absoluto seran proporcionados y registrados en el LIMS. Los arreglos informales entre beneficiarios seran aceptados. Los impuestos sobre tierras en esta categorfa comenzarfan desde el dfa en que los propietarios obtengan un tftulo negociable de dominio absoluto. La Comisi6n de Tierras estarfa disponible para suministrar asesoramiento tecnico durante reuniones locales en las cuales se decide el plan de propiedad y para asegurar la integridad del proceso. Basicamente, la comunidad local tiene la responsabilidad de resolver los litigios locales sobre tierras sujetas a la reforma agraria. 15. Otras Areas sujetas a la reforma agraria que han sido sub-divididas y ocupadas, sin recibir hasta el momento ningLin tipo de tftulo, representan Areas de ocupaci6n reciente en las que los agricultores elegibles han sido identificados pero no han recibido tftulos. En vista de que muchas de estas Areas contienen los ocupantes ilegales originales, es probable que haya propiedades y lfmites en - xii - litigio. Las organizaciones locales tambien tendrfan la responsabilidad de aclarar estas situaciones. La Comisi6n de Tierras evaluarfa los casos de personas que se consideran seriamente agraviadas. Cuando existe m6rito por ambas partes y ambas han usado buena fe, la comisi6n podrd decidir que la parte agraviada reciba compensaci6n del estado en forma de una parcela equivalente en una nueva Area en desarrollo. El objetivo de este ejercicio es regularizar los tftulos con un mfnimo de conflicto social y proporcionar oportunidades agrfcolas a quienes las quieran. El prop6sito no es maximizar el ingreso gubernamental de la venta de su tierra. 16. Existe otra clase de ocupantes de tierras sujetas a la reforma agraria, que podrfan merecer un trato distinto. Estas son las grandes propiedades invadidas por intereses poifticamente poderosos. Al identificar tales casos, el estado tiene la funcion, en el interes de la justicia social, de intervenir y ejercer sus derechos de propiedad de la tierra, ofreciendo la tierra en subhsta. El ocupante actual deberA tener el primer derecho de rechazo al precio de la subasta, menos el valor de las mejoras que este haya realizado. Si esta opci6n no esta ejercido, el ocupante serfa recompensado por el precio de venta de las mejoras que este haya realizado. 17. Finalmente, existen grandes Areas de tierras pdblicas baldfas o informalmente ocupadas sin mejoras, que podrfan ser privatizadas. Los ocupantes que las utilizan de manera "socialmente provechosa"2' y que hayan ocupado los terrenos durante (por ejemplo) tres afilos, recibirfan tftulos seguros si estan dispuestos a pagar el costo de registro de la tierra. Si la tierra ha sido posesionada de manera adversa, similar a lo anteriormente descrito, se podrA usar soluciones similares. Al final del proceso, los tftulos seguros serfan registrados en el LIMS. 18. Para disponer de la tierra pdSblica que no haya sido ocupada ni distribuida, se le dividirfa en tres categorfas: (a) tierras inaptas para la agricultura que deberan ser mantenidas en reservas; (b) tierras aptas para la agricultura, separadas para que el gobierno recompense a las personas que tengan derechos secundarios sobre la tierra; y (c) tierras aptas para la agricultura que el estado vendera dentro de un plazo determinado. 19. La tierra serf? subastada, bajo condiciones especificadas, a empresarios y sindicatos campesinos. El mercado determinara el valor de la tierra y permitirA la selecci6n de agricultores en base al valor que designasen a la tierra. El gobierno establecerA los criterios generales que los empresarios garantizados deberan seguir en terminos de la infraestructura que deberAn proporcionar, y el plazo para el desarrollo de la tierra. El empresario presenta un plan mas detallado, indicando la ubicaci6n de la infraestructura, los lfmites de cada parcela, y el ndmero aproximado de agricultores que seran asentados en la tierra. El empresario sub-dividirfa la tierra y la venderfa a los campesinos. Los empresarios privados, reflejando su certeza de poder vender la tierra a cierto precio (en base a su productividad), presentaran propuestas al precio de mercado. Es posible que los propietarios de latifundios que actualmente utilicen su tierra en forma extensiva, esten incitados a vender su tierra a un empresario, o hacerse empresarios. De esta forma el mercado de tierras se activa y privatiza. 2/ DefiDida en el pirrafo 1.17. - xiii - 20. Para lograr este resultado, los demgs requisitos previos de un mercado de tierras son esenciales. La tierra debera ser documentada, con titulaci6n simple. Es decir, deben estar completas las partes del LIMS referentes al catastro y registro. El credito debera estar disponible, las funciones reguladoras del gobierno deberan estar bien definidas, y el gobierno debera haber realizado un inventario de su tierra para poder porier las parcelas apropiadas en el mercado al tiempo debido. La privatizaci6n de tierras agrfcolas aptas serfa objeto del ejercicio. Para el gobierno, percibir ganancias de la venta serfa elemento secundario, y es el resultado 16gico del proceso de asignar tierras a quienes las demanden. 21. Al igual que todos los programas de venta de tierras mediante mecanismos de mercado, los montos a pagar deben ser lo suficientemente bajos como para permitir reembolsar del ingreso agrfcola. El dxito tambien requiere que los gobiernos y prestamistas abandonen la idea de que los compradores de pequefias propiedades debieran mantenerse en la tierra aunque no ganasen lo suficiente para satisfacer el servicio de su deuda. Se deberg sugerir a quienes sufran infortunios personales o que no hayan tenido exito como agricultores, que transfieran su terreno a otro campesino y busquen otro empleo. 22. Podrfa surgir una reforma agraria de grandes proporciones y con resultados muy positivos en cuanto a la distribuci6n y producci6n. El programa serfa de caracter privado y sin paternalismo, representando una tentativa dramatica de regularizar la propiedad, activar el mercado de tierras, resolver las limitaciones crediticias, privatizar las tierras estatales y fomentar el crecimiento agrfeola. Representarfa un paso importante en el desarrollo econ6mico de Venezuela. Chapter 1: Introduction and Overview 11 L. INTRODUCTIONAND OVERVIEW A. The ObJectives and Structure of the Repoj1 1.1 The objectives of this report are to assess the extent to which the land tenure structure in Venezuela is an obstacle to agricultural development and to suggest changes that are needed in order to have an active and competitive land market. Presently, there is little knowledge of who occupies land and under what legal conditions, on the majority of the country's rural land. Estimates are that over two-thirds of farmland have razt been surveyed to determine who owns what parcel, the boundaries of each parcel, and whether a legal title is warranted. Another problem with the land market is that many farmers on land provided under the agrarian reform do not have a marketable title to their land. They can neither expand their enterprise nor sell it. Finally, there are large tracts of undeveloped state land suitable for agriculture that could be placed on the land market. In this environment, land encroachment and land disputes are inevitable. Until the question of ownership is resolved, it is not possible to have a formal land market. Further, unclear ownership inhibits investment in land improvement and raises the cost of credit. 1.2 The Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Production is supporting a program to clarify land ownership and to sell state agricultural land. Part of this effort may involve reforming the regulatory and administrative structure of land redistribution. These activities are part of the widespread structural and macroeconomic reforms that are being undertaken in VenezuelaY The Ministry has asked for further assistance from the World Bank to complete the cadastre and to assist with the development and sale of public lands. Yet a consensus between the agraristas (the traditional advocates of agrarian reform) and the modern efficiency-driven technocrats on how to solve the land question has not happened. This study will provide essential background information and analysis for future actions. It will provide information that may build a bridge between the two groups by demonstrating that equity and efficiency goals can be jointly achieved. It is against this background of conflict between equity and efficiency, between traditional and medern, and between the past and the present that agriculture activities are undertaken in Venezuela. 1.3 The report is arranged in three chapters. The remainder of Chapter I places the land market in a laiger context. The economy of Venezuela and the role of agriculture in the economy are outlined. Next, the history of land tenure and philosophical dimensions of it are explained, and finally the patterns and status of land ownership are reviewed. Chapter II reports on the institutional basis and operation of the land market. The chapter starts by providing a description of the conditions needed for a competitive land market. This is followed by a review of the agrarian reform legislation and discussion of the structure, functions and method of operation of the agrarian reform agency, IAN. The chapter continues by outlining the types of land titles and registration arrangements, followed by a discussion of the term credit for land. Chapter II concludes with an evaluation of IAN and the success of the agrarian reform to date. In Chapter MII, the various actions 1/ For further details on the general reforms being undertaken by the Government, see "Venezuela: Structural and Macrceconomic Reforms-The New Regime,' World Bank Report No. 10404-VE (Washington, D.C.: World Bank, April, 1992). 121 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership that can be taken to strengthen the land market are collected and discussed. Materials not central to the thesis, but supporting it, are found in annexes. B. The Economy of Venezuela 1.4 Vast oil reserves were discovered in Venezuela in the 1920s, and since that time the performance of the economy of Venezuela has been tied to the uncertainties of the world oil market. Coupled with the development of oil has been the sense among many Venezuelans that heavy reliance on oil would result in a "vulnerable" economy. Therefore, successive governments in Venezuela have been preoccupied with developing a diversified economy where oil would play a smaller role. Diversification has been stimulated through an active import-replacement policy including some very large projects in steel and aluminum.2' 1.5 Despite massive financial transfers to promote the import-replacement policy, the results of the policy have been disappointing. "Nothing appears to have been gained from the windfall (of oil revenues) in terms of non-oil GDP during 1973-82. Consumption has been the only winner and even that gain is probably temporary. "' Agriculture was one of the "beneficiaries" of the import- replacement policy. Through heavy subsidies, input costs and product prices in agriculture were kept down, imports and exports of agricultural products were controlled, preferential exchange rates for agricultural products were given, and active efforts were made to diversify the agricultural base.y A wide variety of agricultural commodities were purchased by a state marketing corporation at guaranteed prices above world levels and sold at lower prices. The difference was financed from oil revenues. In the 1970s farmers also benefitted from subsidies on farm inputs such as seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, animal feeds and credit, but public expenditure on agriculture declined significantly after 1983 as oil revenues declined. In 1984 there was an increased emphasis on agriculture in order to reduce reliance on imports. Minimum prices were increased, quotas were placed on agricultural imports, preferential credit was made available to farmers, and fertilizers were again subsidized. Agriculture responded with growth rates exceeding those of the rest of the economy. But the policies were unsustainable. Explicit subsidy costs in excess of US$1 billion per year, or 2% of GDP, could only be maintained while oil revenues were booming. The result was that the mix and level of agricultural output by the end of the 1980s was inappropriate for a market- based, intervention-free sector. Large adjustments were necessary when, in 1989, the new Government began its structural adjustment and macroeconomic stabilization program. 1.6 With the economic reforms that the Perez administration introduced in 1989, the role of agriculture in a market economy has been placed in a new perspective. Major changes have been 2/ For more detain see "Venezuela: Oil and Exchange Rates" World Bank Report No. 10481-VE (Washington, D.C.: World Bank, March 1992) and Gelb and Bourgnignon, "Venezuela" Oil Windfalls: Blessing or Curse? (New York: Oxford University Press for the World Bank), 1988. 3/ Gelb and Bourgnignon, op. cit., p. 322. 4/ See "Venezuela: Agricultural Sector Review," World Bank Report No. 8389-VE (Washington, D.C.: World Bank, March 1990). Chapter 1: Introduction and Overview f 31 undertaken and more are forthcoming that are placing agriculture on an incentive-neutral basis. With the removal of most of the distortions in agriculture and barring policy reversals, this sector, for the first time in the modern history of Venezuela, can develop according to market principles. The results over the last three years have been that production of the major agricultural products declined in 1989 and 1990 in response to the agricultural policy reforms but partially recovered in 1991. There appears to be a change in the product composition with traditional products, such as cereals and livestock, declining while vegetables and oilseeds are increasing (Table 1.1) 1.7 However, the country is far from united on the direction and extent of the changes in agricultural policy. Part of the debate, and coinciding with the 30-year anniversary of the Agrarian Reform Law, are the entwined issues of land reform, land ownership and land markets. There is a strong clash of values over the role of land and agriculture in society between the traditional agraristas and the younger, market-oriented technocrats. The agraristas defend the original goals of the Agrarian Reform Law which sees land subdivision and distribution--providing land at below- market cost to the rural poor--as a social goal to address equity issues. The market-oriented technocrats, on the other hand, are concerned with economic efficiency. They see the ideal response of the Government as ensuring that a competitive market exists so that the optimum farm size can be determined by market forces. C. The Role of Agriculture 1.8 In terms of the overall importance of agriculture in the economy, it is, by GDP measures, small. Agriculture and agroindustry accounts for only 6% of GDP and has remained at around that level for 25 years. In countries with similar incomes (upper-middle-income countries), agriculture amounts to 11 % of GDP, and in Venezuela's neighboring countries, agriculture's share of GDP is in the high teens and has fallen from even higher levels over the last 20 years. Likewise, agricultural exports have remained at 1 % of total exports since 1965, whereas in countries with similar incomes, agricultural exports account for 13% of total exports and have fallen from double that level over the last 20 years. In addition, Vene uela has a very urbanized population. Only 16% of the total population is rural, making it one of the most urbanized developing countries in the world--about as urbanized as Germany and more urbanized than Japan. This unusual structure can be explained largely by the dominant influence of oil on the economy. 1.9 Yet agriculture has a political and social importance not revealed by the numbers. The rural sector contains many poor, and smallholder farming is seen by the government as a major means of providing economic opportunity and equity to the poor. The "social importance" of farm land is a phrase that is frequently heard when discussing land tenure or agriculture in Venezuela, and this aspect provided the initial impetus for land reform. But agriculture has a potential economic importance also. Venezuela is well endowed with agricultural land. There is considerable physical scope for expansion of the area under cultivation--of Venezuela's 92 million hectares (ha), more than half is suitable for agriculture, yet only 31 million ha are being used and only 2.1 ha are being cropped. 1.10 The areas of farming in Venezuela can be divided into four zones. First is the mountainous area running in an arc from Caracas to the Andean region in the northwest. Approximately 85% of the country's population lives in this region as do the majority of small farmers. They produce fruit, vegetables, coffee, cocoa and milk. The second zone is the llanos or 141 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership lcwlands, running from the southern Andean foothills to the Orinoco delta. The llanos make up approximately 25% of the land area and are used mainly for beef production. A third zone, the central plains, lies immediately north of the llanos and produces the majority of annual crops, particularly cereals, and livestock. The fourth zone is the flood plain of Lake Maracaibo in western Venezuela. This region produces most of the dairy products and sugar. 1.11 Meat is the product with the highest total value in Venezuela, followed by cereals (mainly corn and rice), milk, fr -its, and fish products. Oilseeds, fruits and legumes are the products that have been growing most rapidly in value. Tables 1.1 and 1.2 provide further details. Venezuela is a consistent net importer of agricultural products, amounting to around US$800 million in 1990. Major imports are cereals (primarily wheats), feedstuffs and vegetable oils, while the main exports are coffee, cocoa and cotton. Table 1.1: Venezuela: Agricultural Production. 1985-1991 (000 tons) CEREALS LEGUMES OILSEEDS ROOTS & E7RUIT VEGETABLE LIVESTOCK OTH | & FIBERS TUBERS PRODUCTS a/ b/ 1985 1821.9 44.1 298.7 609.6 2220.6 312.9 4698.1 5819.5 1986 2250.5 46.0 324.7 618.1 2252.3 334.4 4891.9 7470.2 1987 2418.1 48.8 323.6 650.1 2294.9 358.1 5013.2 8160.9 1988 2484.8 50.5 358.3 671.2 2441.6 384.8 5119.9 8463.8 1989 1829.9 52.1 347.7 693.6 2529.6 477.1 4577.3 7947.3 1990 1779.9 59.7 456.9 625.8 2602.7 399.2 4430.7 7040.5 1991 2250.2 59.2 367.7 725.3 2763.6 431.4 4515.7 7210.3 GROWTH RATE c/ 1985-1991 -0.4% 5.5% 5.0% 2.2% 3.4% 5.9% -1.4% 1.8 Table 1.2: Venezuela: Value of Agricultural Production in 1988 Prices, 1985-1991 (Bs million) CEREALS LEGUMES OILSEEDS ROOTSI ERU!S VEGETABLE LIV S OTHERS| & FIBERS TUBERS 1985 1556.1 112.5 392.4 606.2 1386.1 467.5 3743.3 1348.4 1986 1903.4 117.8 445.2 614.3 1407.7 501.1 3878.4 1460.4 1987 2047.8 124.8 417.4 650.8 1430.4 535.7 3923.1 1550.8 1988 2103.5 129.0 488.1 674.5 1522.6 573.5 4022.3 1587.3 1989 1550.9 135.5 486.4 687.9 1575.7 620.8 3766.4 1572.0 1990 2767.8 157.4 748.3 866.3 2102.2 876.9 6064.6 2145.4 1991 3436.9 158.6 635.2 997.9 2266.6 974.3 5990.6 2096.9 GROWI1 RATE gl 1985-1991 10.7% 6.2% 9.9% 8.3% 8.8% 13.2% 8.4% 7.8% a/ Heads of cattle, pig, sheep and goat. b/ Includes coffees, cocoa, sugar cane, tobacco and certified seeds. g/ OLS fitted growth rates. Source: Oficina Central de Estadfstica e Informdtica: Anuario Estadfstico de Venezuela, various issues. Chapter J: Introduction and Overvlew 151 D. The History of Land Tenure 1.12 In 1573, following the Spanish conquest of the lands around what is now known as Venezuela, King Phillip II asserted the right of thi Crown over all conquered land. By royal warrants land was granted to any settlement that was founded, to individuals and to the church. Thus royal, individual, collective and ecclesiastic property ownership was developed. Individual and collective ownership underwent changes over time so that many forms of ownership existed. 1.13 With the birth of the Republic in 1811, much land was confiscated. Simon Bolivar enacted the first Law of Parcelling National Land in 1817. This declared that land owned by absentee Spanish landlords would be seized and subdivided. The motivation for this reform was largely political--to promote the cause of independence. Present land ownership patterns derive from this period. All remaining land was the property of the state, a concept that remained vague until 1936 when it was defined as "all uncultivated land that is neither common land (owned by municipalities) nor privately held." With an incomplete and fragmented land registry and a lack of a national cadastre, land ownership remains less than fully formal to this day. 1.14 To understand the effects of, and impetus for, land reform in Latin America, it is necessary to understand that traditional forms of land tenure there have differed greatly from those in pre-reform Europe or Asia where land reform has occurred. In the latter areas, large land owners have typically been landlords renting parcels to tenants foi payment of cash or crop shares. Tenants are effectively the operators of their farms, whether subsistence or commercial. Although these forms of tenure exist in Latin America, the dominant traditional form of large estates is the latifundio on which most productive work is undertaken by workers under the central control of the owner. The workers are obliged to work for four to six days per week and in return they have the right to till a subsistence plot on the same estate. They also may receive cash or a share of the crop, according to local custom or law. There is a strong dependency relationship between the owner and the worker. The worker cannot be considered to be an independent farm operator with any farm management skills. 1.15 While traditional tenure arrangements and latifundios can still be found, they are no longer as prevalent as they were 50 years ago. Large estates have been either mechanized (modern farming methods) in which case the few farm workers remaining have been transformed into wage laborers, or the estates have been subdivided under the land reform, in which case former workers have obtained their own plots. Some landowners, foreseeing the inevitable, have even "voluntarily" subdivided part of their land holdings for former workers. 1.16 Land reform started at the turn of the century. But the second phase, begun in the 1960s, was the most significant. Venezuela came to the conclusion that land reform was necessary to avert rural tension and social revolution. The Agrarian Reform Law was enacted in 1960 after peasant invasions had occurred on farm estates. This law based land redistribution on the concept of the "social function" of land ownership. 1.17 There are two significant aspects to the "social function" of land as a criterion for distribution decisions. Large landowners who are making productive use of the land-using modern equipment and technology, producing efficiently, and complying with social, fiscal and labor legislation-are said to be fulfilling their "social function" and are less vulnerable to losing their land 161 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership to reform beneficiaries. The second aspect of the "social function" of land is that peasants working land, as squatters or farm workers, should have first right of ownership of that or adjacent land when it comes under the reform process. Only later do new settlers from outside the area become eligible for land. 1.18 Land reform in Venezuela differs in three important respects from that found in other Latin American countries. First, the rural population was a small proportion of the total at the time the reform (about 30% compared with 75% in Mexico, Bolivia, and Peru). Thus demands for land were more manageable than in neighboring countries. Second, because of abundant land, the land reform evolved into what is essentially a colonization program, as large areas of unsettled public land suitable for agriculture were provided to reform beneficiaries. Only in the initial stages of the program was private land taken for the reform, and it never accounted for more than one third of the available land under the reform. Third, the Government paid compensation to those landowners whose estates were expropriated, and usually only part of the estate was expropriated. For these reasons, agrarian reform in Venezuela has been a politically less explosive issue than in many Latin American countries. Peasant demands for land have been met without seriously threatening the larger estate sector, and the farm worker organizations, sindicatos, have been willing partners with the Government as the reform program has evolved from one of estate redistribution to rural development of state land. E. Philosophical Dimensions of Land Tenure and Reform 1.19 When the agrarian reform law was being formulated, the drafters were determined that the latifundio system should never again exist. In order to prevent the reconstitution of large holdings, the drafters legislated that beneficiaries of the agrarian reform could never transfer-sell or rent--their land. While this may have met their immediate concerns, it has severely inhibited the development of a land market. A competitive formal land market cannot exist if a significant number of landowners are restricted from selling their land. The more progressive agricultural observers have therefore suggested that the restriction on land sales should be lifted. Agraristas are opposed to this. 1.20 The agrarista position is both a legal and philosophical one. The legal position is based on the Agrarian Reform Law, particularly Article 15, >.hich states that "land affected by the Agrarian Reform cannot be alienated, mortgaged or rented without authorization by the National Executive for reasons necessary to meet other public or social welfare goals." Adherents to the law maintain that it is a fundamental law of the land and thus supersedes all laws before and after, including the 1961 Constitution.!' 1.21 The philosophical position is cast in human rights versus property rights terms. If the Agrarian Reform Law was intended to substitute the latifundlo system with a more even distribution of land, then it would be a contradiction to allow the recipient of land to freely dispose of it so that 5/ Ramon Vincente Casanova, Victor Gimenez Landinez and Oscar David Soto, "30 Afios de Reforma AgrAria en Venezuela," Derecho v Reforma Aeraria, Vol. 21, 1990, and Oscar David Soto, Venezuela. Pais AgrAria, (Caracas, Venezuela: Arte Editorial Lunosa S.R.L., 1988). Chapter /: Introductlon and Overvtew 1 71 others, who may have more resources, can acquire it and form large estates. Strict adherence to the Agrarian Reform Law is necessary to stop this from happening.V 1.22 The position of the modern market-oriented group is based on efficiency. Land, they believe, would be better utilized and social goals would more likely be met if land could be traded as any other commodity. A free land market with Western-style fee-simple title would lead to a more dynamic and efficient agriculture. F. Patterns of Land Ownership and Tenure 1.23 Land ownership was initially concentrated in the hands of a few. The land reform was intended to address this, and since it is now more than 30 years since the reform began, results of the redistribution should be evident. Jata presented in Table 1.3 show that the land reform has resulted in some alteration in the distribution of land, largely in the middle-sized categories, but at the two extremes--small holdings and large farms--the distribution has not been altered. In 1961, nearly 70% of the farms were less than 10 ha and accounted for 3% of farmed area while 1.3% of farms were greater than 1,000 ha and accounted for 72% of the land farmed. Twenty-three years later these numbers were hardly changed. There are more small holdings, each of a smaller average size, while the estate sector is expanding its resources and acquiring an increasing share in national production. The number of small farmers for whom it i, difficult to break away from their low levels of productivity, has been growing. The land reform has not provided a mechanism v'hereby subsistence farmers can expand to become small commercial farmers. It has frozen subsistence farmers to the bottom rungs of the agriculture ladder.7' While the number of medium-sized farms has increased, both in terms of numbers of farms and the area of farmland, it is insufficient to overcome the number of farms at the two ends of the distribution. 1.24 In addition to land that has been provided under the land reform, questions remain on the ownership of large areas of farm land. Estimates are that over two-thirds, or about 21 million of a total of 31 million ha of farmland, have not been surveyed to determine who occupies what parcels, what are the limits of each parcel, and whether or not legal title is warranted. Of the 13 million ha of reform land, less than half are titled and that is with conditioned titles so that it cannot be sold. Registration of land sales has often been ad hoc and when land with unclear titles has changed hands there is nothing to register. A nationwide cadastre has never been completed, and there is no concordance between rural land registers and those parts of the cadastre which have been completed. At the moment further extension of a national cadastre is underway but completion of it will take several yearsY 6/ Cassanova et. al., and Soto, op. cit. 7/ The concept of the agricultural tenure ladder was developed by Spillman in 1919. The agricultural ladder visualizes the life cycle of a farmer as being made up of successive rungs on a ladder: an unpaid family worker, hired worker, tenant, owner-operator, and landlord. During their lifetimes farmers pass through one or more rungs of the ladder. Spiliman, W. J., "The Agricultural Ladder", American Economic Review, 9 (1919): 29-38. 8/ See Annex 5 for a description of the present cadastre project. 181 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 1.25 Another issue concerns the occupants of the public lands under the jurisdiction of the agrarian reform authority, the National Agrarian Institute (IAN). Many farmers live on land that has been provided to IAN. The tenure status on the vast majority of this land is unknown, and thus the occupants are in a very uncertain status. Perhaps up to 35% have legitimate private rights but the remainder have no formal legal status.2' Table 1.3 VENEZUELA: DISTRIBUTION OF AGRICULTURAL LAND BY FARM SIZE a/ l __________ 1961 1984/85 Percent Change Size 000's of Area 00C'; of Area No. of Area (Hectares) Farms (000's has.) Farms (000's Fs l,, a _____________ ~~~has.) _ _ _ _ _ < 10 213.4 753,289 229.5 702,964 l 67.7% 2.9% 60.6% 2.25% 7.5 -6.7 10 - 49 70.0 1,323,905 89.3 1,729,804 22.2% 5.1% 23.6% 5.5% 27.6 30.7 l50 - 199 18.9 1,661,882 35.4 3,174,690 2.8%o 6.4% 9.3% 10.2% 87.3 91.0 200 - 999 8.9 3,610,565 19.1 7,571,655 2.8% 13.9% 5.0% 24.2% 114.6 109.7 > 1000 4.2 18,655,219 5.6 18,099,092 1.3% 71.7% 1.5% 57.9% 33 -3.0 Total 315.4 26,004,860 378.9 31,278,205 - - la/ Data prior to 1961 (pre-reform) is not comparable with post-reform data, other than totals [1960 No. of Farms = 238, and Area = 22,130]. Therefore, 1961 was used as the base year for comparison. Source: V Censo Agrfoola. Oficina Central de Estadfstica e Informatica, 1988. 1.26 Besides ownership, other forms of tenure are legally possible on farm land in Venezuela but are not common. Land leases for cash or for a share of the crop, for various lengths of time, do exist. Some are formal and are registered. Many are informal. Simply using someone else's land where the owner, government or private, does not enforce his property right, is more common. Numerous other informal arrangements can also be found. 1.27 The presence of overt land conflicts in the present land ownership/tenure system indicates that a land tenure problem exists. One very visible example of land conflict is land invasion. Invasions are reported to have increased since the mid-1980s, even onto well-maintained farms. The most frequently mentioned and well-known instances are concentrated in the states of 9/ Estimates by personnel from the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock. Chapter 1: Introduction and Overview 19J Yaracuy and Zulia, and particularly in the Sur del Lago region of Zulia (south of Lake Maracaibo). These are densely populated regions with very fertile land, able to support a wide variety of agricultural production systems. Much of the area is not being used for intensive cultivation and thus invites invasion. 1.28 Other examples of land tenure/titling problems are illegal occupations without overt conflict. One type occurs along highways because of easy access. The most co; inon and widespread type is illegal occupation of agriculture land in less densely populated areas, particularly the lianos regions. This latter type has not yet raised popular and official attention but will become more important in the future as agricultural development proceeds. 1.29 The Sur del Lago region, south of Lake Maracaibo, is one of the most contentious land tenure situations. Approximately 600,000 ha of land were transferred to IAN but were largely unproductive because of being low-lying--subject to flooding and a high water table. Government investment in drainage and other infrastructure made the land highly productive. IAN, however, has never been able to formally incorporate much of the land into the agrarian reform process for two reasons. First, the necessary land surveys were not done because of lack of personnel and funds. Second, since this was not done soon after the lands were made productive, the defacto occupation of them by politically and economically powerful persons made it too costly to carry through the process as time wore on. 1.30 The result is that most of the land in the Sur del Lago region has been occupied without legal documentation. More importantly, this occupation is by very large operators, many said to be craditional latijundistas and ex-military officers, in an area of high rural population density. Further, it is estimated that over 90% of the arable land is used for cattle. The situation is one of considerable campesino pressure on productive land that is used extensively, and controlled by a few large landholders without formal legal documentation. 1.31 This situation is indicative of the path the agrarian reform took nationwide. After the initial "burst of energy" in the early 1960s, when the most obviously under-exploited private farms were expropriated or purchased, the path of least resistance became the relatively unoccupied public lands on the agricultural frontier, primarily in the llanos region. It is interesting to note that land invasions and land disputes occur in some parts of the country while suitable farming land is unoccupied in other parts of the country. The reason for this, beside the regional differences in population pressure, is the presence or absence of supporting infrastructure. Once roads and other improvements are made, spontaneous invasion occurs. The more remote site& without roads, infrastructure, and support services remain unfarmed. 1.32 As noted throughout the report, there are large areas of land suitable for agriculture that have not been exploited. Precise numbers do not exist but Diagram 1.1 presents the best estimates of land in use. The total land area is about 92 million ha, of which 51 ha million are suitable for agriculture. About 60% of suitable land is utilized, with grazing land occupying about 29 million ha and cropped land acccunting for 2 million ha. 1 10) Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership Diagram 1.1 VENEZUELA: LAND INVENTORY I TOAL LW AREA 102 mGlbn he l SUITARI FOR 1)1UN8LrE FR AGRICULTURE II|AGIRICULUURE I C1 rrAicltn hl ur L1 maOn Ma MEINGX FAUED UNU9ED 1T re thr is t 20 mnolnn Vnue GQRAUINC LAND l | CPPED LAND l |28LD mDllk l i|o milgn ha Source: Constructed fromn offlidal MAC esUmates of land area G. Current Status of the Agriculturat Land Market 1.33 There are three barriers to the development of a land market in Venezuela: (a) the virtual ban on the private transfer of agrarian reform land; (b) the lack of clear title on the majority of land; and (c) the quantity of undeveloped public land suitable for agriculture. The first issue concerning the land market is whether or not land already under the agrarian reform should be titled so that it can be bought and sold or leased. Currently, such land cannot legally enter the private market without specific government approval. As more than half of agricultural land is Chapter l: Introduction and Overview f 111 under control of the state, the government is the major actor in the land market. The second issue concerns the regularization of land ownership. Property registries are inadequate in that they are not based on geodesic information. Boundaries are vaguely defired or ambiguous which gives rise to conflicts. Property titles are frequently not of the quality that can be used as collateral. The third issue concerns the quantity of public land suitable for agriculture that remains vacant or occupied by squatters. Much of this land could be turned over to the private sector. 1.34 Despite severe legal restrictions on transfer, rental or mortgage of public and agrarian reform lands, a de facto land market exists, not only on private lands, but also on public and agrarian reform lands. There are various types of land transactions. 1.35 Sale of Land. Outright sale of land is limited to privately held property. Such transactions are the principal activity in the areas where private property has existed historically, such as the States of Aragua, Guarico and Merida. 1.36 Exchanges of Use Rights on Agrarian Reform Lands through the Sale of Improvements. Most land transfer activity is based on the sale of improvements, since the land itself cannot be sold. This occurs mainly in agricultural frontier areas, such as the States of Zulia, Apure, and Portuguesa, where public and agrarian reform lands dominate. Land transfers are legal on private property, and on public lands before they have been transferred to IAN. But after lands are under IAN jurisdiction any transfer of land is illegal unless specifically authorized. Thus, land that is transferred to IAN is effectively withdrawn from the legal land market, whether previously public or private. Nevertheless 5% of IAN lands (about 400,000 ha) are estimated to be informally transferred annually through the sale of improvements.A'W This type of transaction is important in providing access to land. It is this land market that the agraristas cite as evidence of the reconstitution of large landholdings on agrarian reform lands in the frontier. The original reform beneficiaries have abandoned the land, "selling" it in the informal market. The "purchasers," however, do not have legal title, and may not be able to obtain title, thus putting them in a precarious legal situation. 1.37 Government Recognition of Property Rights on Public Lands. Obtaining this tenure right, tftulo supletorio, is based on the occupant providing evidence of having made improvements and maintaining an active and open possession over a period of years (adverse possession). This type of transaction is important in the a0,ricultural frontier states, where occupation and farming of the land may have occurred continuously, but without any legal standing. There are estimates that up to 40% of public lands are privately occupied, but the occupants have no legal documents. Obtaining a tttulo supletorio removes much uncertainty of tenure. 1.38 Rental Contracts that Grant Tenure for a Determined Time Period. Officially registered rental agreements are a minuscule proportion of land market activity, except on municipal lands (ejidos). There probably is considerable rental activity on agrarian reform lands, but because renting is officially prohibited, the extent of this practice is not known. 10/ Oliver Delahaye, "Agentes Sociales y .Aercado de la Tierra Agricola: Una Aproximaci6n a Nivel Nacional (1958- 1986)," Universidad Central de Venezuela, Facultad de Agronomfa, Instituto de Economia Agrfcola y Ciencias Sociales, July 1990. / 121 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 1.39 As can be seen, the land market is characterized by its informality and uncertainty. The market is neither an open nor an active one. Formal transfers of I nd are the exception. The desire to have an open land market is related to several goals. One is that by making it possible for agrarian reform beneficiaries to alienate their land rights they will gain access to the private credit market for investment and production credit. This may also make it more likely that banks will loan for land purchases. A second goal is to allow those who have made informal lana market transfers, by selling the improvements, to actually sell the land to the occupant. This will provide greater security for the current occupant and thus provide a greater incentive to invest. Third, agrarian reform beneficiaries (and perhaps others) will be able to formally purchase larger parcels that may be farmed more efficiently. The concern, therefore, over the present system is one of its efficiency. The present system freezes production patterns and limit improvements in efficiency by denying access to credit and land consolidation. It denies entry to and exit from the land market. Chapter Il: The Institutional Basis and Operations of the Land Market 1 131 II. THE INSTITUTIONAL BASIS AND OPERATION OF THE LAND MARKET A. Conditons for a Compethive Land Market 2.1 Five conditions must exist in order for a market to be perfectly competitive or "free" (a) The product is homogeneous, so that any one farmer's land is equivalent to any other farmer's land or price differentials exist to compensate for quality; (b) Both buyers and sellers possess perfect knowledge of the relevant alternatives--of technology, prices, markets and quality differentials; (c) Buyers and sellers attempt to maximize profits so that purchasers of land (say) wish to buy it at the lowest possible price, and sellers wish to sell land at the highest possible price; (d) There are a sufficient number of buyers and sellers in the market so that no one individual can influence the market price through sales or purchases; and, (e) There is free entry and exit in the market so that any individual can move into or out of the market without barriers. 2.2 As discussed in Chapter 1, the land market in Venezuela is not free as several of the necessary conditions do not exist. There have been few market participants and information has been inadequate. Entry to and exit from farming are difficult because of unclear or restricted titles. Many sellers cannot sell because they do not have clear title to the land and many buyers are unwilling to pay for land without clear title. Further, credit is often unavailable so that potential farmers cannot become buyers, and the Government is the largest "owner" of agricultural land. These distortions in the land market are one source of inefficiency in agriculture. B. The Agrarian Refonn Law 2.3 In March 1960, the Agrarian Reform Law was enacted in order to transform the country's agrarian structure and incorporate the rural population into the economic, social, and political development of the nation. The agrarian law was structured to protect farmers, rural workers and (campesinos), and it dictated that whoever worked the land should also own it. This objeciive was to be achieved by substituting the latifundia system for a more even distribution of land ownership and by providing campesinos with adequate access to credit and technical assistance. With the passing of the law, the National Agrarian Institute (IAN), an independent agency reporting to the Ministry of Agriculure, became responsible for all aspects of its implementation.@ I1/ The Agrarian Reform Law of 1960 is described in Annex 1. ( 141 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 2.4 Land in Venezuela is owned by the federal government, states, municipalities, public establishments, other legal entities, or individuals. The Agrarian Reform Law affects the land of public entities, including rural public properties and unclaimed land without formal title, terras bald(as. However, it does not affect municipal, ejidal, land. Land held by individuals can also be subject to the Agrarian Reform legislation. Only land that is not meeting the "social objectives" is affected by the Agrarian Reform. This includes land held by renters and unutilized land, but excludes lands that do meet "social objectives," such as parks and reserves, as well as private property that meets the "social objectives." 2.5 The Agrarian Reform Law does not provide a farm size limitation although the Administration can impose limits. Large land estates can be held by a single owner and still be outside the legislation. Similarly, an agrarian reform beneficiary can receive a large parcel of property provided that social policy is served. Venezuela's agrarian reform states the standard for parcel size should be determined by the form and surface of the land, depending on topographic and agricultural conditions and other economic variables. 2.6 The law permits latifundistas to voluntarily break up estates and distribute the land, with clear title and free of charge, to renters, workers and other qualified persons. Assuming this distribution is inadequate to address the needs of the beneficiaries, the beneficiaries retain the right to appeal to IAN for additional land. Some owners have used this provision in order to appease peasant groups petitioning IAN for the subdivision of their latifundios. 2.7 To settle agrarian disputes, Venezuela created special courts to settle matters related to the agrarian reform. Normally, agrarian disputes in court take about six months to resolve. The Superior Court (a court of appeals) hears about 800 cases annually. The trend is to seek administrative solutions to disputes, rather than litigation. In some cases, campesinos refer their disputes directly to their elected officials. The "Commission on Agriculture" of the lower house of Congress receives many cases. As of December 1991, it had a backlog of 500 unresolved cases. C. Structure and Funcdons of IAN-' 2.8 The agrarian reform law is implemented by the National Agrarian Institute (IAN). The activities of IAN are undertaken at two levels-national and regional. At IAN headquarters, located in Caracas, overall control of management, definition of policy and general objectives are undertaken. It also controls and evaluates all national level projects and programs. The Institute is structured into a number of divisions, each responsible for specific components of the agrarian reform process (e.g., land issues, agricultural development, legal aspects of land reform, finance, and administration). It is governed by a Board of Directors, composed of five members appointed by the President; one is the president of the Institute; at least one is an agriculturalist; and at least two are representatives of campesinos. IAN has twenty-two regional offices (agricultural commissions), situated in the capital cities of all the states and federal territories, which carry out policies and programs at the regional 12/ Since this report was prepared in July 1992 there have been major reforms in the structure, functions, and operation of IAN. It is being phased out and its residual functions turned over to a small group in MAC. Chapter 11: The Institutional Basis and Operations of the Land Market ( 151 level. To facilitate their operation, the regional offices are given considerable autonomy, enabling them to pursue programs and policies most needed in the regions they serve, provided that these are in accordance with the law and are approved by IAN headquarters. 2.9 The Institute has wide-ranging responsibilities covering all aspects of planning and implementing the agrarian reform. Its functions can be divided into three categories: land issues; social issues; and finance and legal issues. 2.10 Land Policies. IAN has put into place policies and guidelines on land sales and land donations. Land is granted according to a number of criteria, ensuring that applicants meet the social requirements of the Agrarian Reform Law. IAN is also responsible for all land expropriation and for regulating the conditions of renting land. It also intervenes to prevent the eviction of campesinos who occupy land without title, but conform with the reform law. These functions are carried out by the regional offices. Other activities include the restitution of land and forest to indigenous communities. 2.11 Social Policies. IAN is responsible for ensuring that adequate systems of technical assistance directed specifically to the beneficiaries of agrarian reform are in place. It subdivides land, putting in roads, water, electricity and schools to establish rural communities or asentamientos. Its success at accomplishing this has been limited. It began by providing small plots to landless peasants. The size, they now realize, is too small to provide much other than subsistence farming. Also, the communities they established were too small to be viable new farm communities. IAN now realizes that farm size and community size must be larger. IAN encourages the improvement of living standards of campesinos thiough extension and access to credit. It also promotes the formation of cooperative industries in rural areas aimed at increasing the value-added of agricultural products. 2.12 Legal and Financial Activities. IAN monitors all legal aspects of agrarian reform and appoints lawyers to represent campesinos in agrarian matters before tribunals settling land disputes. IAN brings to the attention of the judiciary violations of the law which have resulted in harm to rural people. In the area of finance, IAN issues bonds, guaranteed by the government, to cover expenses and debts incurred in financing the agrarian reform. D. Implementation of the Agrarian Reform Law v 2.13 When IAN needs to expropriate a piece of property to be included in the Agrarian Reform, a number of procedures must be followed. IAN must pay the owner a fair price for the land prior to its expropriation, and the taking must be in the public interest. Under the legislation, land owners are exempt from expropriation of 150 ha of first class land, or its equivalent in other classes of land, up to 5,000 ha. Further, the Constitution guarantees private property and prohibits confiscations so that any expropriations must be paid for. 2.14 While expropriated property is always paid for, it may not always be paid for in cash. Venezuelan law allows IAN to pay for land, at least in part, using government bonds. The bonds pay interest at 3-4%, may or may not be negotiable, and carry terms of up to 20 years. In an inflationary environment, the expected present value of a 20-year bond at 34% is considerably below its face value. At the inception of the land reform the Government expropriated land for the agrarian reform. i 1161 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership Now it is rare as most land included in the reform program are tierras bald(as transferred to IAN. Therefore the issues associated with expropriation and compensation are largely moot. 2.15 There remains a large demand for land. A "land committee" in IAN prioritizes the list of candidates who wish to become recipients of land. Often farm worker syndicates are formed and have been successful in petitioning IAN for land. But many allocations are made on a more arbitrary basis and depend on "the standing" of the candidate before the committee. IAN recognizes the need to establish more objective criteria for allocating land for settlement. 2.16 IAN may grant land without charge (tftulo gratuito), or may require the beneficiary to pay for the land (tftulo onoroso). It will grant tttulos gratuitos when the economic condition of the beneficiary justifies such action and where the collective interest is served by making these beneficiaries productive. The criteria are subjective. Generally, graduates of agricultural education programs and veterinarians are required to pay for their land. 2.17 In the case of a land sale, IAN is forbidden to make a profit from the sale. When IAN sells the land, it is valued at less than the market price. To establish the base value of land, a set of conversion tables are used giving values of different classes of land in different regions of the country, based on recent sales. This value is adjusted on the basis of land improvements and infrastructure. In regions where there are many commercial farmers, the market price may not be used as a guide because this price may be too high. In this case, the sale price is determined by field studies undertaken by IAN personnel on the potential cash flow from the property. Recipients of the land receive discounts of 5% for each ascendant and for each descendant less than 15 years old. Annual payments are determined by dividing the total sale price by the length of the loan, which ranige from 20 to 30 years, with a three-year grace period after a provisional title is given. Finally, IAN cannot require the annual payment of interest and principle to be more than 5% of the net income from the sales of production from the plot. 2.18 While IAN is prevented from making a profit on land, the law is not precise on what constitutes a profit, what costs of operation can be counted against the profit, and what value should be placed on land transferred to it free of charge from other government units. While providing land to landless peasants and others at a nominal cost may be laudable, doing so by restricting IAN's profits, is an imprecise and inefficient way of accomplishing that goal. 2.19 The area of land transferred to IAN between 1960 and 1990, excluding 1985-1989, years for which no data were available, is shown in Table 2.1. Lands from public origin include the tierras baldfas, land already in the possession of the govermnent, and ejido land. Land of private origin refers to land expropriated from private landowners. 2.20 During the 1960s, the amount of land transferred to IAN grew steadily and by the end of the decade, 1.47 million ha had been transferred to IAN from the public sector, and 1.17 million ha were transferred from the private sector (Table 2.1). During this decade, 147,100 ha were transferred annually to IAN from the public sector, and 116,800 ha from private landholdings. Between 1971 and 1974, acquisitions 'rom public origin grew rapidly, averaging more than one million ha per year. In 1976, these transfers stopped abruptly and very little additional land was Chapter 11: The Institutional Basis and Operations of the Land Market 1 171 transferred for the rest of the decade. In contrast, acquisitions from the private sector were fairly constant during the 1970s, averaging about 44,000 ha annually. In the 1980s, transfers continued at a fairly modest rate, averaging 129,000 ha and 20,000 ha annually for the public and private sectors, respectively, for the years for which data were available. By the end of 1990, the total land transferred to IAN was 7.4 million ha of public lands and 1.8 million ha of private land.12' Of the total land of public origin, about 80% was tierras baldfas, 17% formerly federal- and state-held land, and 3% municipal land. Table 2.1: Venezuela Land Transferred to IAN ('000 Hectares) Year Public Private Total % Public Origin Origin Origin 1960 11.2 38.7 49.9 22.4 1961 52.8 256.6 309.4 17.1 1962 127.5 209.3 336.8 37.9 1963 24.9 38.7 63.6 39.2 1964 2.1 116.8 118.9 1.8 1965 337.6 228.7 566.3 59.6 1966 438.5 114.3 552.8 79.3 1967 191.7 67.5 259.2 74.0 1968 179.1 97.3 276.4 64.8 1969 105.6 52.3 157.9 66.9 1970 52.4 56.7 109.1 48.0 1971 1,054.8 42.2 1,097.0 96.2 1972 999.1 31.3 1,030.4 97.0 1973 1,050.8 69.2 1,120.0 93.8 1974 1,761.2 32.6 1,793.8 98.2 1975 261.1 66.5 327.6 79.7 1976 1.1 40.7 41.8 2.6 1977 0.4 12.7 13.1 3.1 1978 0.0 36.8 36.8 0.0 1979 0.0 52.3 52.3 0.0 1980 0.0 12.9 12.9 0.0 1981 4.7 22.1 26.8 17.5 1982 159.7 29.9 189.6 84.2 1983 17.7 46.7 64.4 27.5 1984 285.9 3.7 289.6 98.7 1990 305.0 2.4 307.4 99.2 Total 7,424.9 1,778.9 9,203.8 80.7 Average 285.6 68.4 Source: IAN Data Files 13/ Other data files show that nearly 13 million ha have been provided to IAN. The discrepancy appears to be explained by the years when data is missing and by land that is in the process of being provided to IAN but where the extent of the land is not known and therefore not yet recorded in the records of IAN. 1181 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 2.21 Table 2.2 shows the allocation of titles by land area, and size of producer over the period 1960-91. During the period 1960-91 a total of 8.1 million ha were allocated to agrarian reform recipients. The cumulated land acquired by IAN reported in Table 2.1 is 9.2 million ha. This indicates that about 1.1 million ha remain in IAN hands and have yet to be allocated.-'' 2.22 Also reported in Table 2.2 are the number of recipients of titles, desegregated into small and medium producers, and agricultural techniciansLP'. A total of 158,027 individuais received land since the start of the agrarian reform process. Of these 118,123 were classified by IAN as small producers, representing about 75% of the total number of recipients. There were 38,662 recipients classified as medium producers, representing 25% of the total land recipients. Agro-technicians received less than 1%. A large proportion of this land was in Anzoategui and Bolivar states, each comprising about 15% of the total land area allocated. Other states in which large amounts of land were transferred were Apure, Barinas, Guarico, and Zulia states, located in the southern and western regions of the country. On average, IAN has distributed 356,400 ha per year, more than 80% of which has come from state land. In the last eight years only 2-3,000 ha of private land has been subdivided annually. There does not appear to be a relationship between the number of titles given by state and the size or location of the state. Barinas, the state where most titles have been given, is a medium-sized state, partly in the Andes and partly in the Ilanos. Anzoategui is a somewhat larger state and is located in the plains north of the ilanos. These two states share the characteristic of having considerable areas of tierras bald(as that could be incorporated into the agrarian reform program. 2.23 The average size of holding for which titles were given by IAN, over all the states, was about 60 ha. There is also considerable variation in holding size between the states, ranging from only 1.6 ha in Nueva Esparta to as much as 543.8 ha in the Federal Territory of Amazonas. E. Results of Agrarian Reform 2.24 To assess the performance of IAN in allocating land to small producers, Table 2.3 shows the distribution of agricultural land by farm size in 1961, 1971 and 1984/85. In 1961, the land distribution was highly skewed, with 68% of the farms being less than 10 ha but only 3% of the farm area, while 1.3% of farms were more than 1,000 ha, but occupied 72% of total farm area. By 1971, after ten years of agrarian reform, the pattern of land distribution had changed very little, with the distribution remaining highly skewed. About two-thirds of the land was held by less than 2% of farms. By 1984/85 the distribution had hardly improved. The number of large farms continued to increase. The number of farms of 200-999 ha increased from 11,800 to 19,100, an increase of more than 60%, while the number of farms of more than 1,000 ha increased from 4,900 to 5,600, higher by 14%. While the number of farms in the middle-sized range has increased and their share of farm area has also increased, it is insufficient to overcome the dominant effect of the number of farms at the two ends of the distribution. 14/ In addition to the nearly 4 million ha discrepancy which may include land currently being transferred to IAN. 15/Agricultural technicians are young farmers with agricultural training who are being encouraged to enter farming by receiving land from the government. Chapter 1/: The Institutional Basis and Operations of the Land Market I 19/ Table 2.2: Venezuela: Allocation of Agrarian Refornt Titles by Land Area, Size of l'roduoer, and Average llolding Size, Cumulative 1960-91. Area Small Medium Ag.Tech Total Small Medium Ag.Tech Ave. Size - Ha --Number ------- - -- -----Percent --- -- Ha - Distrito Pederal 6,300 1,186 429 1 1,616 73.4 26.5 0.1 3.9 Anzoategui 1,219,168 7,951 3,467 296 11,714 67.9 29.6 2.5 104.1 Apure 745,448 4,717 1,724 119 6,560 71.9 26.3 1.8 113.6 Aragua 163,598 4,896 1,404 27 6,327 77.4 22.2 0.4 25.9 Barinas 839,944 9,737 4,912 149 14,798 65.8 33.2 1.0 56.8 Bolivar 1,330,299 7,394 1,706 125 9,225 80.2 18.5 1.4 144.2 Carabobo 80,332 3,457 2,030 47 5.534 62.5 36.7 0.8 14.5 Cojedes 166,177 6,367 1,182 31 7,580 84.0 15.6 0.4 21.9 Falcon 195,809 3,253 1,025 36 4,314 75.4 23.8 0.8 45.4 Guarico 689,239 5,804 3,399 55 9.258 62.7 36.7 0.6 74.4 Lara 135,430 7,324 1,650 50 9,024 81.2 18.3 0.6 15.0 Merida 75,810 5,497 313 4 5,814 94.5 5.4 0.1 13.0 Miranda 6n,788 5,967 1,577 11 7,555 79.0 20.9 0.1 8.3 Monagas 329,212 7,519 1,443 45 9,007 83.5 16.0 0.5 36.6 Nueva Esparta 216 112 10 10 132 84.8 7.6 7.6 1.6 Portuguesa 256,893 7,298 2,594 33 9,925 73.5 26.1 0.3 25.9 Sucre 161,001 4,391 538 3 4,932 89.0 10.9 0.1 32.6 Tachira 136,863 3,413 816 20 4,249 80.3 19.2 0.5 32.2 Trujillo 137,890 5,479 609 17 6,105 89.7 10.0 0.3 22.6 Yaracuy 112,759 6,510 1,226 75 7,811 83.3 15.7 1.0 14.4 Zulia 631,478 6,000 4,856 70 10,926 54.9 44.4 0.6 57.8 T.F. kmozonas 542,151 989 8 0 997 99.2 0.8 0.0 543.8 T.F. Delta Amacuro 40,851 1,635 116 1 1,752 93.3 6.6 0.1 23.3 Reg. Sur del Lago 54,034 1,203 1,272 6 2,481 48.5 51.3 0.2 21.8 Comis. de Calabozo 31,099 24 356 11 391 6.1 91.0 2.8 79.5 Total 8,144,789 118,123 38,662 1,242 158,027 74.5 24.5 1.0 61.3 Source: IAN Data Files. (201 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 2.25 The fact that the distribution of farm holdings is highly skewed and that very little has changed over the 25-year period, are shown by the Gini coefficient. The coefficient value for 1961 was 91.5% indicating a highly skewed distribution. The ratio fell to 90% in 1971, and again to 88.8% in 1984/85, indicating a slightly more even distribution. However, even in 1984/85, the coefficient is extremely high and the fall in the coefficient was extremely small over a long period of time. The total number of farms increased over the period from 315,000 to 379,000 or less than 1% per year. 2.26 It is informative to compare the pattern of land distribution and the effects of agrarian reform on distribution, with other countries. Land distribution in Latin America, and Venezuela in particular, is very concentrated compared with other countries. Twelve of 17 Latin American countries have Gini coefficiers of 0.8 or higher, compared to only three of 21 other developing countries. Venezuela is near the top (most concentrated holdings) of the list. Further, for three countries, where "before" and "after" data is available--Mexico, Egypt and Taiwan--land reform reduced concentration by more than 20 points. (See Annex 7.) 2.27 By associating income by state with the number of land allocations made by IAN, it is possible to assess the extent to which IAN, through its land allocations, has directed its efforts toward the alleviation of rural poverty in order to fulfill the mandate of the agrarian reform. A recent survey estimating the proportion of the total population below a set standard provides the basis for the comparison. The survey gives the percentage of households by state, not satisfying their "basic needs." The results are given in Diagram 2. 1, and this information is compared with the land distribution pattern shown in Table 2.2. 2.28 States where the least poverty was found (where 20%-30% of household were unable to satisfy their basic needs) were Distrito Federal, and Miranda, while in Aragua, Carabobo, and Nueva Esparta the proportion ranged between 30% and 40%. With the exception of Nueva Esparta, these states are in the northern and central part of the country where most of the major cities and major economic activity are located (e.g., Caracas, Maracay, and Valencia). Agriculture is characterized by small farms, producing mainly dairy products, fruits and vegetables for the nearby urban population. The index of poverty is low because of the large share of non-agricultural employment in this region and because agriculture production is of high value-added commodities. IAN activity in these states has been minimal as the farm structure conformed to the "social norm" and farm income is satisfactory. The price of land in these states is considerably higher than in other states (Table 2.4). 2.29 In the west, states in which 40%-50% of the household were unable to meet the basis needs criteria were Lara, Merida, Tachira, Yaracuy, and Zulia. These states surround Lake Maracaibo and also encompass much of the western watershed of the Andean range. In this region agricultural production is concentrated in dairy, fruit, rice, coffee and cocoa. Anzoategui and Bolivar also fell in the 40%-50% poverty category and are located in the center of Venezuela. Typically, farms in these states are large with extensive production of cereals and livestock. In the period 1960- 91, IAN allocated titles for a land area of 1.22 million ha in Anzoategui, and 1.33 million ha in Bolivar. Together they accounted for about one-third of all land allocated over the thirty year period. Consistent with extensive agriculture in the region, the average size of agrarian reform farms was 104 Chapter It: The Institutional Basis and Operatlons of the Land Market 1 211 ha in Anzoategui and 144 ha in Bolivar. IAN has also been very active in distributing land in Zulia. Between 1960 and 1991, about 7% of the total number of titles allocated, covering 631,000 ha, were issued. The averz,je plot size was 58 ha, with 44% of titles allocated to medium-size producers. 2.30 The group of states in which 50%-60% of the households are below basis needs include Barinas, Trujillo, Portuguesa, Cojedes, and Guarico, all in the eastern Andean range, and Monagas, Sucre and T.F. Delta Amacuro in the Orinoco delta region. There, IAN has distributed about one- third of the total amount of land allocated. T.F. Amazonas, located in the south of the country is also in the 50%-60% poverty category. The total number of titles was under 1,000, while the average plot size was the largest of all states at 543.8 ha. 2.31 The poorest state identified by the survey was Apure, where more than 70% of the households are unable to satisfy the basic needs level of welfare. Located in the south-west of the country, Apure is relatively isolated, not well served by rural infrastructure and a long distance from markets. IAN has allocated almost three-quarters of a million hectares and has issued 6,500 titles, with an average plot size of 114 ha, in this state. 2.32 In brief, IAN has been most active in the poorer and more peripheral areas of the country, such as in Barinas, Apure, and T.F. Amazona. These regions are ones without good rural infrastructure and where there is abundant land for both agricultural and non-agricultural users. In addition to providing land to the landless, the agrarian reform has colonized several previously undeveloped, lightly populated states. 2.33 Overall, it would appear that the agrarian reform has not met its goal for a number of reasons: (i) some land transferred to IAN under the agrarian reform process has not been distributed to campesinos, (ii) even less has been titled, (iii) where parcels have been distributed, many are now too small to be economically viable units and no formal provision exists for consolidating units, (iv) very little beyond land has been received by the land reform recipients, and (v) the lack of additional support to campesinos has caused many potential land reform beneficiaries to abandon their land and to move to urban centers. But most notably, the land distribution has scarcely altered in 30 years of the program. F. Land Titles and their Registration 2.34 All property records in Venezuela, including agrarian reform properties, should be registered at the public registry. The public registry is used to inscribe transactions in real estate and regularize their transfer. This contrasts with the cadastre, which is used to delineate property boundaries geographically. The registry inscribes documents, a cadastre describes property, providing an inventory of the nation's land. Ideally, the property registry would be coordinated with the cadastre so that property documents registered would be referenced to the cadastre map. 2.35 Property-related documentation is governed by a specific law. There is a "principal registry office" in Caracas and in each of the capital cities of each state in Venezuela. Each district of each state has at least one regional office as well. Registered documents carry the weight of "public faith." This means that their contents have been legally verified and therefore have the effect of law. Thus, registration of documents can be extremely important. (221 Venewuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 2.36 Principal offices and regional offices have public registrars. Fees collected by the registry office are set by statute and are related to operations rather than the size of landholdings or the value of the land. Registrars and their employees are forbidden to accept "gifts" and from registering any transaction in which they are a party. Offices must be open for registration of documents at least four hours a day and the files are open for public inspection. Every few months, local registries send copies of their records to the principal registries, and the principal registry offices send copies of their records to the Ministry of Justice. 2.37 Many formalities are required for recording documents. For example, registrars will not record a document unless it has be,n drafted by an attorney and the document must be in Spanish. Normally, when the document is recorded, the registrar, each of the parties at interest and several witnesses are on hand to record the document. A person can request the registrar to certify the ownership of a piece of property, whether it is encumbered, whether it is subject to any limitations or conditions, and whether it can legally be sold. This greatly simplifies the title search process, since the certification of the registrar will carry the weight of law. 2.38 Venezuela appears to have in place an adequate legal infrastructure for dealing with property registration but no mechanism to provide a concordance with a cadastre. This is a major shortcoming. The cadastre is essential for juridical security for all parties. The registry records the sale but does not define the land being sold in terms of its physical and geographic characteristics. The Agrarian Reform Law did not require completion of a cadastre prior to execution of the reform. This made it possible to subdivide land on the basis of physical description rather than using the cadastre. Govfernment inaction on the cadastre means that Venezuela has no Torrens-like system to guarantee property boundaries. Property transactions recorded by civil registries are not linked with a physical description and map of the actual property. Thus property is more likely to be disputed because boundaries are ambiguous. This in turn affects the marketability of the land. 2.39 As in any jurisdiction, the law on the books may not be the law in practice. Field interviews did not reveal any serious systematic departure in practice from the law, although coverage was far from exhaustive. But if the registries work well, why is so much land unregistered? The cost may prevent some smallholders, illiteracy or lack of knowledge of registration may prevent others, the requirement that attorneys draft the document, and the speed or accuracy of inscription (errors or fraud) may deter others. The actual reasons will need to be ascertained through interviews in subsequent work. The fact that so much land is unregistered appears to be a factor limiting the land market in Venezuela. When the cadastre is complete and formal land registration increases, then the registration system will need to be updated (computerized) in order to handle the increased load. G. Land Prices 2.40 Land prices are not collected in a systematic manner in Venezuela. IAN collects farm land prices from sales recorded at local registry offices for the purpose of fixing a value on the land it acquires and subdivides. The many informal land transactions are not recorded. Land prices for some states are given in Table 2.4, and these are used to demonstrate the difference in prices across states, reflecting productivity and locational differences. Also, price movements over a limited time can be observed. Chapter 11: The Institutional Basis and Operations of the Land Market 1 23] 2.41 Prices differ greatly between states. For example, in 1987, the land price in Aragua was Bs$8,000/ba compared to only Bs$451/ha in T.F.D. Amacuro. Land price levels reflect the characteristics of the land. For example, in Aragua, Cojedes, and Portuguesa, prices are high reflecting the closeness to the major cities of Caracas, Maracay, and Valencia. In contrast, Apure and T.F. Delta Amacuro lack infrastructure and access to markets, and prices there are considerably lower. 2.42 Between 1987 and 1990, the real price of lar,d declined with the exception of a few states. Price decreases are especially evident in the period 1988-89, when major structural changes took place such as removing producer price supports, raising of agricultural interest rates and trade liberalization. Land prices declined, reflecting the declining net return to farming. In some states prices fell more than in other states, reflecting the different output mix in those states. In general, land that IAN has provided to agrarian reform beneficiaries is land in more remote, less populous states where land prices are lower. This pattern of distribution is consistent with the claim that the agrarian reform has evolved into a colonization program. Table 2.3 Venezuela: Concentradon of Agricultural Land 1 ~~~1961 1971 1984/85 Size 000's of Area 000's of Area 000's of Area (Hectares) Farms (000's ha) Farms (000's ha) Farms (000's ha) < 10 213.4 753,289 171.1 577,087 229.5 702,964 67.7% 2.9% 60.2% 2.18% 60.6% 2.25% 10 - 49 70.0 1,323,905 73.8 1,429,143 89.3 1,729,804 22.2% S.1% 26.0% 5.4% 23.6% 5.5% 50 - 199 18.9 1,661,882 22.7 1,970,802 35.4 3,174,690 2.8% 6.4% 8.0% 7.4% 9.3% 10.2% 200 - 999 8.9 3,610,565 11.8 4,824,784 19.1 7,571,655 2.8% 13.9% 4.1% 18.2% 5.0% 24.2% > 1000 4.2 18,655,219 4.9 17,668,318 5.6 18,099,092 1.3% 71.7% 1.7% 66.8% 1.5% 57.9% Total 315.4 26,004,860 284.3 26,470,134 378.9 31,278,205 Gini Coefficient" | .915 .900 [1 .888 a/ The Gini Coefficient is a measure of concentration and is derived from a Lorenz curve. The coefficient (G) ranges from 0 to 1, where G=0 represents all farms of the samc size, while G=1 indicates that aU was land held by one unit. Source: V Censo Agrfcola. Oficina Central de Estadfstica e lnformatica, 1988. (241 Venezuela: Land Markets, L, d Reform, and Rural Land Ownership Table 2.4 Venezuela: Average Cost per Hectare by Federal Entity. Federal Entity 1987 19885 1989 1990 Growth Rate I l I l J 1987-1991 Real Bs./Ha Aragua 8,000 6,552 4,424 3,747 -23.4 Lara 2,127 1,479 1,469 1,981 -2.2 Zulia 1,126 1,153 724 1,271 -1.0 Trujillo 1,360 1,170 459 741 -24.1 Commis. S. Del Lago 1,176 1,309 882 943 -10.0 Falc6n 1,748 1,831 918 1,078 -19.3 Anzoategui 740 56. 341 384 -22.0 Bolfvar 894 717 428 272 -33.5 Barinas 800 880 551 707 -8.0 Cojedes 1,582 2,016 1,607 1,097 -12.4 Guarico 500 923 551 471 -6.7 Portuguesa 2,960 2,534 2,095 1,792 -15.6 Apure 590 615 337 396 -16.5 Sucre 800 687 459 741 -6.1 T.F.D. Amacuro 451 401 278 256 -18.7 Source: IAN. H. Term Credit for Land 2.43 A prerequisite for a well functioning land market is access to term credit for the purchase of land. Successive governments have considered access to credit at affordable interest rates a key objective of the agrarian reform process. To meet this objective, a number of public sector agricultural finance institutions have been established, and legislation has forced private banks to make credit available to agriculture on favorable terms. The emphasis, however, has been on short- term production credits rather than on long-term credit for investment in land acquisition or improvement (See Annex 3 for further details.) 2.44 While commercial banks are wiiling to use crops as collateral for loans, this type of collateral is not acceptable for medium- and long-term credit for investment in land purchases and farm infrastructure. For new investment in agriculture by non-farmers, new farmers, or agro- technicians, credit is r.ot -enerally available from the private sector. Commercial banks are unwilling Chapter tl: The Institutional Basis and Operations of the Land Market 1251 to undertake term lending in agriculture because ambiguous titles have little collateral value and in many cases titles cannot be attached as part of a mortgage. Non-farmers have particular difficulty obtaining credit to enter farming because they have no track record in farming. 2.45 Since beneficiaries of land under the agrarian reform do not possess a mortgageable title to their land, they cannot use their land as collateral for loans. Therefore, the issuance of transferable titles to land would be an important step in removing a market failure which prevents the development of a formal credit market. The uncertainty of tenure is especially a problem for the agrarian reform sector and above all in those states receiving most of their finance from ICAP (e.g., Barinas, Guarico, Monagas, and Portuguesa). In 1990, of the applications ieceived by ICAP, more than 50% did not have title to land, and about 70% of applicants for loans were rejected because of uncertainty of land tenure. Without long-term credit, farm development and land acquisition is restricted. (261 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership IBP. 23867 LU~~~~~~~~~ N Z > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~U '- a ffi E i: D7A I 0I '7 , o..S gS U .7 W"'W,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A It X Chapter 111: Recommendations for Strengthening the Land Market 127) III. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR STRENGTHENING THE LAND MAARKET 3.1 In arriving at conclusions and recommendations for strengthening the land market, a framework has been developed that could be used in whole or in part as the basis for a major redirection of the agrarian reform and as a way to settle the issues of land ownership. The recommendations substantially modify the existing institutions and alter the way that Venezuela deals with land ownership. They address the issue of how to make land markets more transparent and active, how to further incorporate government-owned land into farming and IIow to protect the interests of the rural poor. 3.2 The problems that exist in the rural land market in Venezuela are: * lack of clear, marketable titles on the majority of land; * some agrarian reform farms, particularly in more densely settled states, are not viable commercial farms; * large tracts of state land suitable for agriculture are either unused or being squatted on; and, * numerous low income landless rural people. 3.3 A program to simultaneously solve these problems at minimal cost and minimal government intervention, that satisfies the concerns of the agraristas to protect the rural poor and also satisfies the reformists desire to increase efficiency in agriculture is proposed. It revolves around: * clarifying land ownership by completing a cadastre, developing a land information management system (LIMS), and implementing a land registry; * providing a marketable title to reform beneficiaries and others; o reorganizing the functions of IAN so that it becomes a regulatory agency to private land developers or producer groups, or that it contracts out the land development function; * selling in a managed way, the large tracts of state land suitable for agriculture; and, * allowing a rental market for farm land to develop. 3.4 To implement such a sweeping proposal requires detailed planning, considerable initial expenditure, and careful sequencing of events, the specifics of which are left to future work that might deal with the implementation of this proposal. It also requires that the macroeconomic and agricultural sector policy environments be stable and predictable, and that farm inputs, such as credit 1281 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership and extension services, be available. Safeguards, such as providing legal services for those who cannot finance them, requiring bonds for private sector participation, and pioviding relief and appeal procedures when an apparent injustice has been perpetrated, may be provided during the transition. 3.5 Several of the conditions necessary for the existence of a free land market are not present in Venezuela. The chapter starts by itemizing changes in the present system that are needed to fulfill the conditions for an active land market--changes in tenure and credit, and changes in the way that IAN operates. The chapter concludes by proposing the framework for a much more fundamental change in the way that farm land is managed and allocated in Venezuela. A. Land TItles 3.6 Land titles have several effects on agricultural development. Title acquisition leads to more security so that farmers can internalize the benefits of improved productivity. This strengthens investment incentives, which lead to increased demand for capital and inputs. Further, titles and a competitive land market lead to greater access to longer-term credit because land can be used as collateral. A competitive land market would allow market forces to determine farm size. There would therefore be a tendency to transfer land from large farms where the marginal productivity of land is low to holdings where it is higher. High productivity units, in terms of net income per unit of labor, are the small-to-medium family farms.L& In addition, titles, along with enforcement of property rights, provide the basis for resolving land conflicts. 3.7 Resolution of tenure problems and providing well defined titles is necessary for political and civil stability, social justice, as well as economic and agricultural development. More equal distribution of highly fertile land would improve social welfare. This would also lead to more intensive exploitation of a productive resource resulting in greater agricultural output. This does not imply that government intervention, via expropriation and subdivision of large holdings, is required. Rather, clarifying land ownership and providing marketable title would allow the forces of economic efficiency to determine farm size. The opportunity cost of holding unused land will increase when land is readily marketable. Some large land-owners will decide to sell all or part of their parcels. 3.8 If, after a period of time, it is observed by policy makers that the tendency toward smaller haciendas is occurring more slowly than they believe is desirable, then the government could impose a flat, per unit land tax on all agricultural land in order to further raise the opportunity cost of holding unused land.1A' There should be little concern about large landholdings if they are being farmed. Since, after a certain size, farms tend to duplicate activities of optimal-sized farms as there are few economies of size, they will be employing local workers at about the same rate per unit of 15/ There is considerable cross-country evidence demonstrating this. See Eric B. Shearer, Susana Latarria-Cornheil and Dina Mesbah, "The Reforn of Rural Land Markets in Latin America and the Canbbean: Research, Theory, and Policy Implications, LTC Paper 141, Land Tenure Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison, April 1991. 16/ The tendency for farm size to gravitate towards the optimal may occur slowly because of lack of confidence in the government to provide the conditions for a open land market or to provide a stable economy, or for various other reasons. Chapter 111: Recommendations for Strengthening the Land Market 1291 output as optimum-sized units.7' Not every rural resident either wants to be or is capable of being a farmer. Many do not have the skills, interest or risk-profile and are better employed as farm workers. Resolving the legal status of all occupants would reduce insecurity and lead to greater and more productive land use. 3.9 In order to have an active formal land market and rental market, the owners of the land must be known and legally recognized. Also, their property rights must be enforceable. Because of the ambiguity of much of the farm land and the lack of access to it for many small operators, it is important that Venezuela designs and implements a comprehensive, integrated land information management system (LIMS). Such a system cannot and need not be created nationwide in the first instance, but the present work on the cadastre should be designed so that it can become part of a LIMSAY Priority areas, where population density is great, where disputes are numerous, or at the edge of the agricultural frontier, should be completed first. It should then be expanded over the years to include other regions until the whole country is covered. All land within areas where the cadastre has been undertaken would be registered to correspond with the cadastre, and marketable titles would be given to landholdersL'9. Safeguards to ensure the integrity of the concordance between the cadastre and local registries will need to be established. Provision must be made to maintain the LIMS. The advent of computerized record keeping greatly simplifies the job of transferring information on land sales from registries to the LIMS office. Streamlined and strengthened enforcement mechanisms should accompany the establishment of a LIMS. 3.10 Disputes will arise over ownership in the first instance as the concordance between local registries and the LIMS is being put in place. These disputes will need to be resolved in an expeditious and equitable manner. To do this it is useful to examine the different types of occupation (tenure) of land that exists and prescribe procedures for each. The discussion assumes that the government is prepared to implement a modest, flat, per unit land tax, more as a means to establish a commitment to ownership than as a means to raise revenue, although the revenue from the tax can be used to finance the maintenance of the LIMSE'. The suggestions made here can be implemented without the land tax, but the tax and a fee for providing marketable titles will simplify the land adjudication process. 17/ Annex 4 provides a summary of studies showing medium-sized farms to be most productive in terms of returns per unit of area. This evidence, along with reforms to activate the land market, should alay the fears of agraristas regarding the reconstitution of latifundios. 18/ A land information management system is a systematic, three dimensional arrangement of data regarding the characteristics of land related spatially to the earth. It includes the hardware, software, staff and institutional support needed to acquire, store, manipulate, analyze and display spacial data. 19/ The Ministry of Agriculture and the legislature are considering enabling legislation for a national cadastre (see Annex 2). It would be partially financed by the World Bank and IDB. (See Annex 5.) This is the beginning of a LIMS. Eventually, the entire country should be covered. 20/ The government should actively explain to the public the benefits to be derived from the land tax. The tax would tend to discourage holding unused land, would discourage the reconstitution of latifundios, and would provide strong legal rights to title holders who now possess land either with some ambiguity or with a conditioned title. In return for paying the land tax, owners and land occupiers will be able to internalize the enhanced value that their properties will assume on issuance of a marketable title. (301 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 3.11 There are seven land occupancy situations that can be distinguished: (a) Fee-simple land, tftulosplenos, where owners are well-established commercial farmers; (b) State-owned land not transferred tc IAN, tierras bald(as, which are untitled and may or may not be occupied, and amount to 18 million ha;aL' (c) Municipal land, ejidos, which are owned by various sub-state levels of government and may or may not be occupied, and amount to 3 million ha; (d) IAN land, improved with rural infrastructure (roads, water, electricity) and registered; (e) IAN land, improved and unregistered, where (d) and (e) amount to 9 million ha; (f) IAN land, unimproved with occupants; (g) IAN land, unimproved without occupants, where (f) and (g) amount to 4 million ha. (a) Fee-simple land is the easiest case to map. Most of these holdings are medium to large commercial farms. Some are traditional latifundios that have survived the land reform. Some of the latifundios are not actively farmed in their entirety and will have illegal invasions around their perimeters. Where this type of tenure is present, it may be mapped directly from the local registries following title search and survey. Disputes between neighbors concerning boundaries will be settled under the present system of land courts which will have improved procedures to streamline their functioning. Campesinos who have been squatting on a farm for a period of time, say three years, and where the rightful owner has not enforced his property rights, would be given title to the piece of land that they can show they have farmed, and the legal owner would be compensated. Communities of squatters on latifundios would be required to resolve disputes themselves, with the guidance of the land commission, and present a plan to the titling authority.m' The authority and the enabling legislation would make clear that this is a one-time action to regularize land titles and once the titles are issued under the present system of registration, ownership by adverse possession on private property would be greatly restricted. All landowners, including those campesinos newly titled, would be required to pay a fee of, say, the equivalent of three years of land taxes, as the price for receiving clear title. 21/ The area that falls into each category are estimates and the actuals are unknown. Estimates were made by the mission based on discussions with individuals, both government officials and academics, knowledgeable with land ownership in Venezuela, and from official data where that exists. There are both a paucity and a lack of uniformity in official data. The estimates given here exceed the 35 million ha of land regarded as land with agricultural potential in Venezuela. This is because the ejLdos are usually not counted, as once they fall under municipal control they are difficult to liberate for private use. 22/ Safeguards to prevent coercion by a powerful few will need to be developed. Representation in the campesino organizations would need to be specified so that the process is fair and transparent. The cadastre will help this process by registering claimants of each parcel and thereby defning the parcelE and persons in dispute. Chapter III: Recommendations for Strengthening the Land Market (311 (b) Tk&mas baldfas would be mapped and placed in the LIMS. If it is found to be occupied, if possessors can demonstrate that they have occupied and farmed it for, say, three years, and if they are willing to pay a fee equivalent to three years of land taxes, they will be provided with a marketable title. If indigenous communities are found in forested areas, the community would be given rights to the land in order to eliminate "open-access" exploitation of the forest.2' Otherwise land will be titled to the federal government. This land would then be sold or given away, with free and clear titles, under conditions explained later in the chapter. The occupiers would be compensated for the improvements they have made. They would also be given rights of first refusal when the land is sold. A land commission will be set up to adjudicate the process and only when that channel has been followed would a plaintiff be allowed to take a case to the land courts. (c) Ejid land will present some difficulties as it is protecled by common law and the constitution.2' This land has belonged to municipalities since colonization or has since been assigned to them by the federal government. The ejidos are located at the perimeters of cities and towns, often on agriculturally productive land suitable for intensive smallholder farming. They are quite extensive and beyond any reasonable needs of many smaller municipalities. But once land is declared as ejidos land it cannot be sold, mortgaged or assigned. Given its locatien, it is reasonable to expect that much is being occupied and some farmerd. In the first stage this land can be entered into the LIMS as municipal land and squatters left in place. After other steps of land regularization have been undertaken, the ejidos can be revisited. Several approaches could be made. The government could make the necessary legal changes so that the land can be transferred. Municipalities would then be required to submit a plan to the land commission proposing how they would deal with the situation. Alternatively, the government might require the municipalities to present a justification for possessing each parcel of land. Those parcels for which a satisfactory justification cannot be provided would be titled, under adverse possession criteria to those squatters who can demonstrate that they have lived and farmed the land for ten years and who are willing to pay a fee equivalent to, say, three years of land taxes on the land to the municipality. This would be a one-time transitory measure to allow for the titling of all ejidal land. Because of the difficulty of dealing with municipal land and its relative unimportance, this politically sensitive issue need not be addressed at the outset. (d) Agrarian Reformn Land which has been subdivided, improved and distributed will have been titled as it was provided to beneficiaries, but the titles do not allow for the sale of the land. As a result, the present pattern of land occupancy and use reflects properties that have been abandoned and others for which informal arrangement have 23/ The critical issue is not who owns the land but that the landowner can eliminate open-access to it and thereby -manage it in a sustainable manner. 24/ The history of ejidal land is discussed in Luis GonzAlez Vale, Ensavo Sobre Derecho Aerario v Reforma Agraria en Venezuela (Caracas, 1963) Pages 58-74.) Art. 3, Ley de Tierras Baldias y Ejidos (Aug. 19, 1936). Art. 136, Constitution of the Republic of Venezuela (January 23, 1961). (321 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership been made between the two parties. Once cadastral points have been established, the local asentamiento would be required to submit to the land commission a plan agreed by the majority of the asentaniento under the rules and guidance of the land commission, that establishes individual and common ownership of plots within the area. Marketable titles would then be provided and recorded on the LIMS. Where informal arrangements have been made between beneficiaries, the original owner has no further claim on the land but may register to become a new beneficiary of the agrarian reform. If abandoned land is unoccupied, title reverts to IAN who then finds suitable potential farmers (including neighboring farmers who may want a larger parcel) and provides it to them, with marketable title, under existing mechanisms. Taxation of land that falls under this category commences from the day that owners obtain 2 marketable title. The land commission would be available to provide guidance at local meetings where the ownership plan is being decided and to ensure the integrity of the process. But basically the responsibility for providing resolution to local disputes on IAN land would be that of the local commnunity. (e) Other IAN land has been subdivided and occupied but has not yet been issued with any type of title. These are areas of recent occupancy where IAN has identified eligible farmers but has simply not issued titles. Since many of these areas contain the original illegal occupants, there are likely to be disputed property and boundaries. Again, the responsibility for clarifying these situations should rest with the local organizations, sindicatos, asentamientos, farmers unions and the like. An appeals process for those who feel seriously aggrieved could also be established. The land commission would hear such cases and where merit exists on both sides and good faith has been used by both, the commission may rule that the aggrieved party receive compensation from the state in the form of an equivalent plot of land in a newly developing area. 2' There is another class of occupants on IAN land that may need to be treated differently. These are the large landholdings that have been invaded by politically powerful interests and by organized crime. The activity described earlier in the Sur de Lago region (para. 1.29) characterizes this situation. Where such cases can be identified, then the state has a role to intervene. Again, the intervention should be premised on the objective of regularizing titles with minimum social friction subject to meeting "socially just" criteria. In these cases, an ideal solution would be for the government to exercise its ownership rights to the land and offer the land for sale at auction. The present occupiers would have the first right of refusal at the auctioned price less the value of the improvements that they have made. If they decide not to exercise their option, they would be compensated from the selling price for the improvements they have made. A marketable title would be issued and registered in the LIMS following the auction, and 25/ The objectives of the exercise must always be kept in mind. The purpose is to regularize land titles with the minimum of social conflict and provide farming opportunities to those who wish it. The purpose is not to maximize government revenue from the sale of all its land. The provision of "free" land can be justified as state compensation for failure by the state to supply the legal infrastructure necessary to provide clear title in the first instance. Chapter 111: Recommendations for Strengthening the Land Market 1331 land taxes would be payable on the land from that time. Safeguards that protect the integrity of the process would need to be designed, as the proposal has difficulties that could prevent a transparent and unbiased outcome. But this ideal solution may not be practical in situations where powerful vested interests have the ability to coerce and intimidate participants, and to manipulate the system in other ways. Judgements of those more familiar with the actual situation will need to be made in these situations to ensure a desirable outcome. (t) and (g) Unimproved IAN land, yet to be improved, subdivided or titled, and which may or may not be occupied, should be privatized. Those squatting on the land who are using the land in a "socially beneficial" way and have occupied th^ land for three years, should be given clear title if they are willing to pay a fee equivalent to, say, three years of land taxes. If the land has been adversely possessed in a situation similar to that described in the Sur de Lago region then remedies similar to those described above could be used. At the end of the process fee-simple titles would be recorded on the LIMS3A In agricultural frontier areas, where government presence at any level is weak, the enforceability of property rights may become a problem. Experience from other countries in the region demonstrates that when incentives are given to claim frontier land in the absence of strong government, private and often violent enforcement by the most powe. n interests prevails. As part of the design of the land privatization/regularization program, the government will need to specify a mechanism for enforcing the property rights that it is providing to its citizens. The success of the program depends critically on the ability and willingness of the government to enforce its laws. 3.12 A further issue concerns the selling of public land suitable for agriculture which has not been transferred to IAN. It involves redirecting the efforts of IAN and redefining the role of the state in the process. Following the placement of tierras bald(as in the LIMS and the recording of titles in favor of the government, the land would be divided into three categories. The first is land unsuitable for agriculture that should remain in reserves. The second is land suitable for agriculture that is set aside to be used by the government to compensate those with secondary claims on other land. The third is land suitable for agriculture that the state would sell within five years of being registered in the IUMS. The method of selling would be by auction and be regulated by IAN, which would be revamped under the plan. 26/ In several countries in Central and South America and Asia, the record of payment of land taxes is prna facie evidence of ownership when titles are disputed or being provided. If an occupant can show that he has paid land taxes for ten years on state land, he is given title to the parcel. Should the Government of Venezuela encourage voluntary payment of back taxes when it implements a land tax and should payment of taxes be a criteria for ownership claims? In the case of Venezuela, this is not a good idea. Besides the obvious difficulty of making a tax retroactive, it fails to solve boundary issues. Without a cadastral system the authorities do not know on what parcel the person has paid tax. Taxes could inadvertently be collected from two individuals on one parcel. Further. sanctioning the payment of back taxes will bias the process against the poor, illiterate and ill-informed. It will also encourage massive invasions of public land while the cadastre is underway as entrepreneurs realize that this is their last opportunity to get 'cheap" land. 1 341 Venezuela: Land Markets. l and Reform, and Rural Land Ownership B. Changes in IAN 3.13 The National Agrarian Institute has been less than fully effective at carrying out its mandate. Many of the reasons are beyond its control. It has had a limited and variable budget with which to operate. This has resulted in it not being able to adequately supply infrastructure and services to the communities it has established. The pressures of quickly placing landless on the land during the early years of the program resulted in it spreading its efforts too thinly. Further, it failed to get adequate and timely assistance in clarifying disputed land, so that considerable time and resources were expended on this problem. In addition, some of the laws under which it operates have restricted its effectiveness. Specifically, the law that it may not make a proflt is unfortunate, especially given its limited budget allocation. 3.14 But more fundamental changes are required in IAN if a serious effort is to be made to regularize and privatize land ownership. Under usual conditions, a reform would be implemented and then the implementing agency would shrink out of existence having completed its task. After 32 years, IAN remains a healthy bureaucracy with considerable land to distribute and little to show in terms of enhanced small farmer productivity, provision of titles, or rural development. New ways of operating to reactivate the agency are needed and "sunset" provisions for it should be made part of the LIMS project. A plan to undertake fundamental changes in IAN and privatize public lands is needed. The following proposal is modelled after the experience of other countries (Annex 5). 3.15 A regulatory land commission, IAN, would be established to regulate, manage and oversee the distribution of land. All the land falling into category three, state land suitable for agriculture, would be placed in the custody of IAN. IAN then would undertake one of two actions. It would either contract out the development and subdivision of parcels to land developers, or it would sell land to developers and farmers at auction. The second alternative is favored as it allows the market to determine the value of land and allows the selection of farmers based on the value they place on the land.22' IAN would establish general criteria that bonded developers must follow in terms of the infrastructure they must provide and the time over which development must occur. The developer would present a more detailed plan of development showing the location of infrastructure, the boundaries of each parcel, and the approximate number of farmers to be settled on the land. The developer would subdivide the land and sell it to campesinos and others wishing to farm. The developer could be a campesino union whose pooled resources provide the down payment for a loan to pay for the acquisition of the land. A loan would be secured on the basis of title to the land. In the case where a union of farmers buys the land, they would be collectively responsible for the loan. If individual members cannot service their share of the mortgage, then another member of the union would temporarily operate his plot until the union is reimbursed for the loan payment it made on behalf of the delinquent borrower. This process is not unlike that of the role of land developers in 27/ When any government asset is to be privatized or allocated to the public, the question arises as to the rules under which individuals will be queued to receive their share of it. If it is free, everyone would like their share and if everyone were granted a share, each share would be infinitely small. In the final analysis, it is found that the fairest mechanism to allocate an asset is to provide it to the individuals who value it the most. The only way these individuals can be identified is to ask them to place a value on the asset at an auction (say). The highest bidder then receives, and pays for, the asset and the rest of society is compensated by the revenues going into the govemment coffers to finance public activities. Chapter 1//: Recommendations for Strengthening the Land Market 1351 industrial countries except that the credit arrangements are designed to make the servicing manageable for the smallholder. On completion of the last payment, the owner receives freehold title. IAN would exercise a regulatory role, would not be a fiscal liability on the treasury, and could satisfy campesinos demands for land much more rapidly. If there remains concern about agglomeration of small plots into large latifundios, then transfer of this land could require the approval of IAN.21' Since IAN acquires government land freely, the private developers bidding on the land, reflecting what they know they can sell the land for (based on its productivity) would establish the market price. Owners of latifundios who are now using their very fertile land extensively, would be tempted to sell it to a developer or become developers themselves. 3.16 For this outcome to result, the other necessary prerequisites of a land market are essential. Land must be documented and titling clear. That is, the cadastral part of the LIMS must be complete. Credit must be available to at least the developer, the regulatory functions of IAN must be well defined, and the government must have undertaken an inventory of its land so that it can place the appropriate parcels on the market at the appropriate time. Privatization of suitable agricultural lands would be the object of the exercise. Making a profit from the sale for the government would be secondary but is the logical outcome of the process of allocating land to those demanding it. 3.17 The distribution of land would change. The number of small subsistence farmers and small farms would fall, the number of medium-sized commercial farms would increase. The number of large farms would probably increase as new farm land in the hinterlands is brought into extensive production and as very large latifundia are subdivided into several large farms. The total number of farms, after consolidation, is unclear. There could be more or fewer, depending on the number of smalholders who decide to sell and the number of new farms registered under the land development program. 3.18 As with all land sale programs through market mechanisms, payments due must be low enough to permit repayment out of the income earned by farming. Since land is being auctioned to developers for subdivision and sale, the price of land offered at auctions will reflect this. But the market value of land often includes elements of prestige, inflation-hedging, or other non-farming values.22' If this is the case then the government may need to provide a one-time cash grant to small farmers for the down payment on their new property. When land is being sold in sizeable amounts, and to developers who will be required to on-sell it, this phenomenon of the "overvaluation" of land should be minimal. 28/ If Venezuela has a free market in land, there should be little fear of reconstitution of latifundios. The only reason to be concemed about resales of land by smaltholders is a political one. Approval of sales by IAN would be proforma but would provide political comfort. Lack of approval by IAN would need to he made exceptional in order to ensure market processes and in order to avoid misuse of IAN's authority. 29/ Binswanger argued at the XX IAAE Conference (Buenos Aires, 1988) that non-output related elements of land prices make it impossible for campesinos to buy land through market processes, or for govemments to make land reforms in which beneficiaries pay for land received. While there is some validity to this view, it is not always the case. Some farmers are able to make down payments and other mechanisms, su-h as mortgage insurance, could be designed. Also, in a stable macroeconomic environment where land is being colonized, taxed, and expropriated if unused, land will likely be priced according to its productive value. 1361 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership 3.19 Success also requires that governments and lenders abandon their view that campesino land buyers must be kept on the land even if they do not earn enough money to meet their debt service. Those who suffer personal misfortunes or are not successful farmers, should be encouraged to transfer their land to another camnpesino and seek other employment. The legal structure that allows foreclosure should be reviewed and strengthened if necessary. C. Credit 3.20 For agriculture to develop, credit needs to be available to a broad spectrum of farmers. Farmers will not have access to long-term credit if land or physical improvements to the land cannot be used for collateral. Only if clear ownership exists, as demonstrated by a transferable title to land, will farmers be able to use land for collateral. 3.21 The present situation in Venezuela results in size-stratified access to credit, severely limiting small farmers' ability to obtain capital and leading to lower productivity and subsistence production. A lack of credit restricts small farmers from moving out of their semi-subsistence situation, keeping those families in a low income/poverty status. In order to provide access to capital, smallholders must be able to use their major asset-land--as collateral. For this they require a marketable title to the land. 3.22 In the past, the government has had numerous programs and agencies to provide credit at below market rates to farmers. But an extensive body of literature and experience shows that availability of credit, rather than its price, is the factor that limits the use of credit by farmers.; As part of the structural reforms, the government is substantially reducing its participation in agricultural credit. As the government withdrawals from the agricultural credit market it will leave a temporary hole in the farm credit system for a large segment of Venezuela's farmers (those without title). Transition provisions need to be considered while the private (formal and informal) sector develops to fill the gap. Commercial banks have been unwilling to finance small-farmers because the banks have little experience with them. More importantly, the transactions costs of lending and of maintaining a small-farmer loan portfolio are high. Banks prefer to lend to fewer large farmers. Input suppliers, product traders, agroprocessors, and informal rural sources will start providing credit to smallholders, but these sources require time to develop. 3.23 One possible measure to bring commercial bank lending to small farmers is to subsidize the transactions costs for individual or group loans that commercial banks make to them during a 30/ See "Govemment Policies Towards Rural Finance," in Rural Financial Markets in DeveloDing Countries, J. D. Von Pische, et.al., Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983. Some other literature shows that land collateral is less important in small farming credit and repayment performance is the criteria that determnines the availability of credit. These studies fail to note that collateral is less important in some countries because of the inability or costliness of enforcing the contract. Foreclosure is virtually impossible. Chapter 111: Recommendations for Strengthening the Land Market 1371 transition phase.A1' This would be done by paying a fixed fee, of say $100, to any bank that makes a loan to tiue target group. The social service for which the government would pay is making term or production credit available to the small viable farmer. This intervention is the leas, Jistorting in terms of economic efficiency, it achieves the goal of small farmer access to credit during the transition, and it appears to be a much smaller fiscal cost than the government credit agency (ICAP). After a number of years, the banks will have accumulated sufficient experience with a set of client- farmers and with cost-minimization loan servicing so that the subsidy will be unnecessary. Unions of farm producers may also be formed in order to reduce the transactions costs to banks of fragmented loan portfolios. The risk of default can be shifted to the group rather than the individual farmer thereby lowering the risk of default. 3.24 In brief, there exist creative mechanisms that can be tailored to ease the transition and enhance pr,vate sector development as the public sector moves out of farm creit. Marketable titles will give smallholders greater access to credit. With credit and a land market, agrarian reform beneficiaries will be able to form larger units on reform lands and evolve into commercial farmers. This is ideal from the standpoint of agricultural output, level of agricultural income, income distribution, and rural development. To be beneficial to society as a whole, there need to be viable opportunities for those who choose to leave farming. Overall, the present land tenure situation is hindering access to credit and thereby restricting agricultural development. D. Concluding Comments 3.25 There is much to be done to develop the land market in Venezuela. But the steps are largely mechanical, and the process is clear. What is required is financing to establish a LIMS, time to resolve land disputes in a fair and transparent manner, vigorous enforcement of the newly acquired property rights, and political determination to ensure that the process is well-planned, well-managed, well-explained and carried to completion. 3.26 In many ways, the task in Venezuela is more manageable than in other countries. No systematic land-based recording system exists so a state-of-the-art system can be implemented without the constraints of marrying it to an existing system. The proportion of the population affected by the regularization of land is much smaller than other countries. Venezuela has the means to compensate those who are harmed by the regularization by providing them with alternative farm land that is presently undeveloped. And the private benefits from implementing the plan would be significant and apparent. 3.27 There are wider public benefits also. A more productive agriculture would emerge as on-farm investment increases with the enhanced security of land titles. This increased activity will spill over into invigorated rural communities and will be reflected in lower food and fibre prices to consumers. And a vigorous and profitable agricultural sector will provide a larger tax base for rural communities and for the central government. Having noted these benefits, it must also be understood that developing the land market is not the panacea for agriculture in Venezuela. It is one essential 31/ Binswanger has suggested this approach for Mexico where official credit institutions for small farmers have bxen undergcing major reforms as part of the Article 27 reforms. A pilot scheme along these lines is being prepared. See Binswanger, Hans, "Mexico-The Future of Small Firmer Lending," Unpublished mimeo, 1992. 1381 Venezuela: Land Markets, Land Reform, and Rural Land Ownership step in the development process, the absence of which is perhaps the most restrictive bottleneck in the present development of agriculture in Venezuela. 3.28 T'he program that would emerge would be private and market driven. The land market would be truly activated and privatized. An agrarian reform of dramatic dimensions, with very positive distributional and output results, could emerge. - 39 - ANNEX 1: THE AGRARUN REFORM OF 1960 Statement of Purposes of the Agrarian Reform Law 1. Agrarian Reform in Venezuela relates to the political change in 1958, when peasants exerted pressure to obtain land, and organized invasions and a mass rural exodus to the cities in search of better living conditions. The Agrarian Reform Law, enacted in March 1960, arose as a consequence of the above. Its main objective was to achieve the transformation of the country's agrarian structure and the incorporation of the rural population into the economic, social and political development of the nation. Bases of the Agrarian Reform Law 2. Objectives and PrinciDles The objectives and principles of the present law appear in its Preliminary Title, "Regarding the bases of Agrarian Reform," whose nine articles are as follows: "Article 1 The objective of the present law is to transform the country's agrarian structure and to incorporate the rural population into the nation's economic, social and political development, through the substitution of the large landed estate system with a just system of property, ownership and use of the land, based on an equitable distribution of the land, proper organization of credit and integrated assistance to farmers, in order that land constitute for the person who works it, the basis of his economic stability, the foundation of his progressive social well-being and the guarantee of his freedom and dignity. Article 2 With regard to the indicated objectives, this Law: (a) Guarantees and regulates the right to private land ownership, in keeping with the principle of the social duty that such ownership should fulfill and other regulations established by the Constitution and Laws; (b) Guarantees the right of all individuals or population groups capable of agricultural or livestock work, who lack land or own insufficient quantities of it, to be granted ownership of economically workable (farmable) land, preferably in the places where they work or reside, or, when circumstances deem it necessary, in zones which are duly selected and within the limits and norms established by the Law; (c) Guarantees the right of farmers to remain on the land they are cultivating, on terms and conditions stated in the Law; - 40 - ANNEX 1 (d) Guarantees and recognizes the indigenous populations, providing protection for them where necessary. (e) Specially favors and protects the development of small- and medium-sized rural property and agricultural cooperatives so that they may become stable and effective. To this effect, the right to small family property is established, in accordance with norms on free grants contained in this law. Article 3 Both private persons and the State have obligations stemming from the principle of social duty of land ownership. Article 4 For purposes of the statement in Article 2(b), the State will progressively incorporate into the country's economic development, those zones or regions which are under-used or inaccessible to technical and rational use due to lack of means of communication, irrigation, drainage or similar works. To this effect, integrated development plans for economic or hydrographic regions will be promoted, but in any case, hydraulic and agricultural development works should be planned for the purpose of integrated development and be in accordance with Agrarian Reform plans. Article 5 The state shall establish and increase adequate and necessary public services for rural transformation and to support farms and farmers in newly established farm communities. Article 6 The corresponding items will be assigned under the Law of the General Budget for Income and Public Expenditure, for the financing of the agrarian reform and consequent agricultural plans. Article 7 The State shall be obliged to create the bases and conditions required to dignify salaried farm work, by means of proper regulation of the same and its legal relationships, in accordance with the transformations stemming from agrarian reform. Article 8 Under conditions established or which may be established, foreigners will enjoy the same rights as Venezuelans and be subject to the same obligations in areas which are the object of this Law. Article 9 Those persons who have the right to request land grants, may denounce the existence of persons who do not fulfil their social obligations. Accusations shall be made before the respective Delegation, which shall open an investigation and inform the plaintiff within thirty (30) days. - 41- ANNEX I If the accusation is found admissible, the lands will be subject to purchase or expropriation, in accordance with the present Law. Article 9 of the Law further states that 'For purposes of the agrarian reform, private land ownership fulfills its social duty when it adjusts to all of the following essential elements: (a) Efficient working of land and its appreciable use in such a way that production factors are applied efficiently therein, according to the zone where it is located and its particular characteristics; (b) The personal work and administration, and financial responsibility of tl. agricultural enterprise, by the land owner, except in cases of occasional direct exploitation with justified cause; (c) Fulfillment of provisions on renewable natural resource conservation; (d) Observance of legal norms regulating salaried labor, other rural working relations and agricultural contracts under the conditions indicated by this Law; (e) Registration of rural property in the National Land and Water Cadastre Office, in accordance with relevant legal provisions.' Content and Regulation of the Agrarian Refonn Law 3. Land ApDronriation The appropriation of both public and private lands for agrarian reform is one of the fundamental functions of the agrarian reform. Public lands in general (uncultivated, national rural land, rural land belonging to autonomous institutes, and rural buildings belonging to the government and villages), are affected by the law in accordance with Article 10. In the case of private lands, there is an appropriation procedure for those lands which do not meet the function of property; this may be by purchase or expropriation. Nevertheless, the Law does not limit the extension of rural properties which fulfill their social duties. The Law also gives peasants the right to land where they work, as long as the land is not subject to fulfillment of social duty or is being worked by tenants. In this case the owner may reserve for himself a 150 hectare first-class portion, or its equivalent in other quality land, which the law considers to be non-expropriable. Non-expropriability ceases when rural property, constituted by uncultivated or fallow land, has not been cultivated in three years, or efficient cattle-raising organized in 5 years. With reference to land classification, the Law and its regulation in Article 198, is governed by a value scale, ranging from first-quality and with a maximum of 150 ha assigned, to seventh-quality with a maximum of 5000 ha, which the farmer may reserve for himself. In accordance with article 142, lands improved with irrigation works should be used for intensive crops. - 42 - ANNEX 1 4. Grants Agrarian Reform beneficiaries older than 18 years of age have the right to be granted "ownership of economically workable land" (Article 61), preferably in places where they work or live. These grants may be either individual or collective, and awarded in two stages: first, possession (ownership) is given, then a year later title is granted (Art. 95 to 101). 5. Expropriations Agrarian expropriation is a legal instrument of Public Law which the law has created to obtain land by judicial means for the agrarian reform. The most important cause of expropriation established by the Law is the non-fulfillment of social duties of the property. Rural properties which are fulfilling social duties may also be subject to expropriation by exceptional means (Articles 27 and 33 of the law). Payment shall be made by agrarian debt vouchers. 6. The Law's Guarantees to Peasants The Law guarantees individuals or peasant groups the right to agrarian centers which shall have the necessary land to found the population center and later expand it, the local government office, schools, machinery sheds, playgrounds, etc. (Article 57). Furthermore, for agrarian reform purposes, the agricultural credit service shall be organized by the State in such a way that it may be applied preferably to meet the credit needs of small and medium farmers as well as agricultural cooperatives (Art. 109 to 118). Marketing and technical assistance services (Art. 127 and 128), minimum prices (Art. 131), as well as fostering the formation of cooperatives for credit, production, consumption, machinery procurement (Art. 137). These guarantees must be fulfilled by IAN. Nevertheless, it should be pointed out that these are a financial obligation of the National Govermnent. 7. Water and Irrigation The Law dedicates a chapter to water, giving importance to the appropriation of water for agrarian reform purposes, in which the use, possession and benefit of water are subject to limitations, regulations and restrictions determined in the present Law, in laws and regulations on water, irrigation works, land drainage and improvement, and concerning the use of zones benefitted by these laws (Art. 4i to 51). Chapter II of the Law on "Irrigation works, drainage and other water uses" (Art. 180 to 189), highlights the creation of an Irrigation Institute in charge of coordinating, planning, building and operating irrigation works, drainage, and other water uses carried out with "national funds"; these must always be carried out in accordance with the "agrarian reform plans". Even though this Irrigation Institute does not exist, some of its functions are carried out by the National Directorate of Agricultural Infrastructure of the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock (MAC). In order for agrarian reform to be carried out, the Law created the "National Agrarian Institute" (IAN), the Agricultural and Livestock Bank (BAP), now the Agricultural and Livestock - 43 - ANNEX I Credit Institute (ICAP) for credit to small and medium farmers. For its part, MAC is in charge of organization, technical assistance and formulation of irrigation development plans. - 44 - ANNEX 2: PROPOSED MODIFICATIONS TO LAND LEGISLATION 1. The Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Production and the legislature are currently studying a proposal to create a national cadastre. Under the proposal, all future documents recorded at property registries would have to include a parcel identity number (or cOdula) before the document could legally be recorded, assuming that the parcel had been mapped and covered by the cadastre. The c6dula corresponds to a case file which contains a number of characteristics of the land, including its boundaries. Title searches would only be required to research back to 1936, the original year of the "Baldfas Land Law."1' These two steps would begin the integration of the cadastre and the streamlining of the title search process. Eventually, the entire country would be included in the cadastre. 2. The proposed cadastre bill is divided into ten chapters: Chapter I ("General Provisions") integrates the legal aspect (the registry) with the physical aspect (the cadastre) and contemplates further integration with the economic aspect (valuation of property). Chapter II, "Executory Bodies and the Preservation of the National Land Cadastre," would create a new "Instituto Autdnomo de Cadastro Nacional" with offices throughout the country in each municipality. Chapter III, "Regional Cadastral Offices," and Chapter IV, "Municipal Cadastral Offices," further define the local level implementation of the planned cadastre. Chapter V, "Implementation of the Cadastre," is a procedural text. Chapter VI, "Connection between the National Cadastre and the Public Registry," establishes the general rule that judges, notaries and registrars should refuse to acknowledge land transactions unless the land is registered with the public registry and the cadastre office. Chapter VII, "Administrative Resources," contemplates the use of the normal administrative process for resolution of most disputes. Chapter VIII, "Penalties," provides for civil and crimninal punishments for non- compliance with the law. 1/ Now, title searches have to go back to 1848 in order for a 'land owner' to demonstrate that the land was not illegally taken baldfas land. Even a search back to 1936 is onerous. In many U.S. state jurisdictions titles need only be searched back for 30 years. But in Venezuela the dates have a political importance. It is likely that many large haciendas were established on baldfas land after 1848 but before 1936. It will be a divisive political issue if the Governmnent provides clear title to large landholders who have occupied land before 1936 (illegally) but cannot trace ownership back to 1848. - 45 - ANNEX 2 Chapter IX, "Defense of the User," allows public officials to act as counsel to landholders with disputes before the National Cadastre or Public Registry Offices. Chapter X, "Final and Transitory Provision," discusses the transition to a new cadastral system. 3. The drafters do not foresee an immediate, full implementation of the draft law. Rather, the law will be phased in progressively to allow the cadastre to be formulated and completed. Beyond these measures, the methodology for carrying out the project is still being developed. 4. Since the cadastre project attempts only mapping and not normalization (the formalization of ownership and tenure), the drafters hope that there will be little opposition to the mapping. Still, criminal sanctions will apply to anyone interfering with the mapping process. The concern is that peasants living on land owned by third parties or the government may suspect that once the land is mapped the authorities will know they are squatters and attempt to remove them. In order to prevent interruption of the mapping process and allay the fears of peasants, the Government will undertake an education effort with local leader participation. 5. The bill for a national cadastre does not contemplate any new procedures for dispute settlement, if and when mapping uncovers a conflict in the registry. In this case, the interested parties would be left to litigate the case according to standard procedure in the courts. A dispute settlement mechanism would be a useful inclusion in the new legislation. - 46 - ANNEX 3: CREDIT FOR LAND ACQUISITION 1. In addition to the goal of restructuring land ownership in rural areas, a major feature of the Agrarian Reform Law is to provide supporting services and technical assistance to increase agricultural productivity. Successive governments have considered access to credit at affordable interest rates as a key objective of the agrarian reform process. To meet this objective, a number of public sector agricultural finance institutions have been established, while legislation has forced private banks to make credit available to agriculture on favorable terms. This annex provides an overview of credit for private land acquisition. The topic is divided into three main components -- sources of credit, availability of credit, and constraints on access to credit. A. Sources of Credit 2. The Instituto de Credito Agrario (ICAP) is a first-tier government operated and financed institution, created in 1975, set up to provide short- medium- and long-term financing to individual small producers and organizations of small producers (campesinos) in accordance with a program established by the Directorate for Coordination and Development of the Directorate General for Reclamation and Irrigation. Beneficiaries of ICAP loans may or may not be recipients of land under the Agrarian Reform Law. Agricultural projects receiving ICAP loans are closely supervised and directed, and have been used mainly to provide farmers with working capital (six-month term) or capital for purchase of equipment (five-year term). Because ICAP has subsidized interest rates (ranging between 3-7%), a great number of applications for loans are filed each year. Interest rates in 1991 were set at 7% (nominal), an increase from the previous 3%. ICAP also charges an additional 3% fee for technical services. This ,ee is used to circumvent th.e congressionally-mandated interest ceiling, but even with it, real rates of ICAP loans to farmers are negative. At present, ICAP is undergoing a major restructuring, with a consolidation and computerization of its operations. It will close a number of its offices to increase the staffs ability to administer the credit by centralizing some functions. 3. The Banco de Desarrollo Agropecuario (BANDAGRO) was created in 1967 and focuses on providing finance for medium and large producers, and agribusinesses at low interest rates (e.g., in 1989 the rate was 8.3%). BANDAGRO has recently encountered financial problems resulting, in part, from a failure to recuperate outstanding loans. It is being liquidated and will soon be closed. After submitting a project proposal, ICAP and private sector lending institutions obtain funds from the Fondo de Credito Agropecuario (FCA), a second-tier state bank, established to direct credit for agriculture to the private and public banking institutions. Funds that it provides banks must be lent to producers at no more than 84% of the commercial rate offered by large banks. 4. In the private sector, legislation forces commercial banks to provide a certain amount of credit to the agricultural sector. Currently, banks are obligated to allocate 22.5% of their lending portfolio to the agricultural sector, of which 17.5% is for primary production, and 5.5% for agro- industry. Mandatory lending to agriculture will be phased down to 12% under the present credit reforms. - 47 - ANNEX 3 B. Availability of Credit 5. It is the view of many commentators that the available financial resources of the ICAP, and the private banks are smaller than the amount required to meet the needs of land preparation, crop husbandry, and harvesting. This, together with delays in loan approval and authorization of the corresponding disbursements and the lack of assistance by the credit organizations in the actual application of loans that have been issued, results in crops being sown after the most favorable time of the year. With low or negative real rates of interest it is to be expected that the demand for ICAP funds exceeds the amount available. Only when credit policies are reformed and agricultural credit is priced similarly to that of other credit, will it be possible to get an idea of credit constraints in agriculture. 6. Despite the lack of collateral and crowding out by public lending institutions, private banks do make agricultural loans as a result of legislation requiring banks to keep a certain share of their portfolio for agricultural loans. While loans are available from the private banking sector, the terms and conditions of such loans are high. Typically, collateral is required at a rate of at least 2.5:1. Loan conditions are based on the number of factors including title, the size of farm, the productivity of the land, the market price of the land and output, and history and credibility of the individual applicant. Loans are evaluated by agricultural advisors in regional offices. Typical loan terms might be five years for investment on property. The maximum under the law is 10 years. Short-term loans are typically for about 180 days for crop production and these make up the bulk of loans. Private banks keep an agricultural portfolio of about 75% short-term and 25% medium-term loans. Interest on agricultural loans by law is 84% of the commercial interest rate. Clear title is an important factor in evaluation loan applications, but those without title are not automatically excluded, especially if the farmer has a long history of farming in the area, or if a farmer is a member of a farmers credit groups (union of debtors). These unions informally guarantee the repayment of loans made to individual members. Considerable peer pressure is placed on individuals to repay loans and because of the better credit risk of union members, bankers are more willing to make loans to them. 7. Short-, inedium-, and long-term credit disbursed by ICAP for the period 1986-90 is reported in Annex Table 3.1, along with the number of beneficiaries and area covered. Disbursements are reported in constant 1985 Bolivars, using the consumer price index as deflator. In 1986, Bs. 1.25 billion were disbursed by ICAP, of which 68% were short-term credit, 25% medium- term, and 7% long-term. In 1987, total disbursements increased about 14% in real terms, with short- term loans declining, and medium-term loans increasing, In the late 1980s, total lending fell dramatically, falling to Bs 1.03 billion in 1988 and to only Bs 0.6 billion in 1989. Thus in the four years between 1986 and 1989, total lending fell by about 50% in real terms. During this period, the proportion of short-term loans increased at the expense of medium- and long-term loans. In 1990, total lending recovered slightly, reaching Bs. 0.9 billion in constant 1985 Bolivars. However, the trend towards greater short-term credit and less medium- and long-term continued. In 1990, 75% of loans were short-term, 22% medium-term, and 3% long-term. Of the short-term credit disbursements, 70%-80% were used for cereals, oilseeds, vegetables, and annual horticultural products. This pattern of lending supports the argument that the lack of clear title to land by the applicants limits their access to credit. Short-term credit is available because the annual production is used as a lien for the loans, but long-term credit is generally not available because it cannot be secured. - 48- ANNEX3 8. During the period 1986 to 1988, the total number of beneficiaries was about 60,000 annually. However, in 1989 the number dropped by about 11 % to 52,800, and then even further in 1990 to only 45,200. Despite these changes, the percent of short- medium- and long-term loans remained fairly stable, ranging from 78%-82%, 17%-25%, and 0.1%-1.1%, respectively. The total area supplied with credit follows fairly closely the pattern of total disbursements, which reached a peak of 400,000 ha. in 1987, and then fell to a low of 241,000 ha. in 1989. In 1990, the area recovered slightly to 266,000 ha. 9. The most striking observation is that the area covered by short-term loans is more than 90% of total agrarian reform area in every year, and reached as high as 97% in 1989. Therefore, there is very little area which received medium- or long-term credit, indicating a lack of credit for land purchases and improvements. D. Constraints on Access to Credit 10. In many countries, banks are more willing to lend long-term to agriculture because they are able to insure themselves against loan default by requiring producers to encumber the title of their land as collateral. The land can then be acquired in the event that producers are unable to meet their loan commitments. However, as discussed earlier in this report, the majority of producers (especiaily those beneficiaries of land titles under the Agrarian Reform Law) do not posses a mortgageable title to their land. Titles give the right to use the land, but not the right. to sell or transfer it to other parties, unless under strict guidelines established by IAN and the Agrarian Reform Law. As a result, IAN land titles do not represent sufficient collateral for loans and rural credit markets have failed to develop. Therefore, the issuance of transferable titles to land and the evolution of an active and transparent land market would be important steps in removing an important market failure wnich prevents the development of a formal credit market accessible to campesinos. 11. One of the major goals of the Agrarian Reform Law is to increase agricultural investment through wider access by campesinos to credit for working capital, land improvements, and land purchases. As discussed earlier, campesinos have been unable to secure loans from commercial banks, and the credit available from state institutions for long-term investments has dwindled to very low levels in recent years. During the mission much anecdotal evidence was obtained indicating that access to long-term credit by campesinos is inadequate, and that institutional changes are needed to allow small farmers access to longer-term credit. But one must ask what is the demand for long-term credit? If land reform recipients are obtaining their land for a very low price and at the easy credit terms provided by IAN, then they do not require long-term credit for land purchase. It is those campesinos and other would-be farmers who are not beneficiaries of the land reform who may be unable to raise long-term capital and those farmers who want to undertake long-term farm development. T;here is no way to estimate how important this group might be, but given the moribund formal land market and the relative availability of land at concessional prices from IAN, it is not unreasonable to speculate that, given IAN's credit program, long-term credit is not a constraint to most would-be small farmers. The only time it may be a problem is if the availability of land from IAN is small (and there are reports that the demand for IAN land from campesinos exceeds the supply) or if certain individuals who wish to be farmers are considered by IAN to be ineligible or low priority in the IAN land sweepstakes. - 49 - AN1yEX3 Annex Table 3.1: Short-, Medium-, and Leug-Term Credit Disbursed by ICAP, 1986-90 Short-Term Medium-Term Long-Term Total 1986 Amount (Bs. 1985 Million) 852.3 308.4 88.2 1,248.9 % 68.2 24.7 7.1 No. Beneficiaries ('000) 49.9 10.4 0.3 60.6 % 82.3 17.2 0.5 Area ('000 Ha) 326.2 25.6 0.7 352.5 % 92.5 7.3 0.2 1987 Amount (Bs. 1985 Million) 769.9 547.2 105.1 1,422.1 % 54.1 38.5 7.4 No. Beneficiaries ('000) 48.0 13.0 0.3 61.3 % 78.3 21.2 0.5 Area ('000 Ha) 371.8 26.6 0.7 399.1 % 93.2 6.7 0.2 1988 Amount (Bs. 1985 Million) 653.8 292.6 83.7 1,030.1 % 63.5 28.4 8.1 No. Beneficiaries ('000) 44.3 14.8 0.3 59.4 % 74.6 24.9 0.5 Area ('000 Ha) 332.5 22.2 0.3 355.0 % 93.7 6.3 0.1 1989 Amount (Bs. 1985 Million) 437.4 169.8 24.9 632.1 %6 69.2 26.9 3.9 No. Beneficiaries ('000) 42.7 10.0 0.1 52.8 % 80.9 19.0 0.1 Area ('000 Ha) 234.8 5.9 0.4 241.1 % 97.4 2.4 0.2 1990 Amount (Bs. 1985 Million) 657.9 192.6 24.1 874.5 % 75.2 22.0 2.8 No. Beneficiaries ('000) 36.9 7.8 0.5 45.2 % 81.6 17.3 1.1 Area ('000 Ha) 242.1 21.9 2.0 266.0 % 91.0 8.2 0.8 Source: [AN 12. The uncertainty of tenure is especially a problem for the agrarian reform sector and above all in those states receiving most of their finance from ICAP (e.g., Barinas, Guarico, Monagas, and Portuguesa). In 1990, of the applications received by ICAP, more than 50% did not have title to land, and about 70% of applicants for loans were rejected because of uncertainty of land tenure. 13. In addition to insufficient collateral, the private banking system has been crowded out of the long-term credit market because of the presence of ICAP, BANDAGRO, and FCA that provide long- term credit at below-market rates. For the private banking system to operate, the agricultural secor must be weaned off subsidized credit and there is a need to formally document land ownership so that 50 - ANNEX 3 the private banking system is willing to play a larger role in financing agriculture, particularly in financing land acquisition. 14. Under credit reforms supported by the World Bank Financial Sector Adjustment Loan, the government is: (i) deregulating agricultural interest rates; (ii) phasing out the portfolio requirements on commercial banks; and (iii) requiring public institutions lending to the agricultural sector for purposes similar to FCA's to lend under comparable terms and conditions. These changes are made to strengthen the initiatives already made by the Government to liberalize interest rates and credit allocation, and to streamline the development banking functions for agricultural financing. 15. With pressure from farm groups, there is a plan under discussion to allow IAN land to be used as collatera. The proposal is that if a private loan is granted to a farmer on IAN land, and the farmer defaults, t..2n the bank would obtain a title to this land. But even under this proposal, the private banking sector is dissuaded from making finance available because the legal system is very slow and unpredictable in settling disputes. 16. With interest rates rising substantially in the last two years, some farmers have been unable to meet their loan agreements. However, banks do not wish to become owners of land, and so they have tried to find ways to restructure existing debt. A possible solution being discussed in the context of the law of the agricultural credit fund, would guarantee loans in the private banking sector. Already, FCA offers credit guarantees of up to 50% of loans, aimed primarily at smaller producers that do not have sufficient collateral. As a complementary measure, the Government has been exploring the various mechanisms that would provide access to credit for small producers, including the establishment of a guarantee fund. However, such insurance schemes are prone to the typical problems of establishing insurance markets -- namely moral hazard and adverse selection problemsY. Commercial banks are providing credit to producers for short-term production and medium term for improvements. Also, banks lend to a pool of farmers, "farmer unions," where membership in the association partially secures the loans. In this case, if one member of the group defaults on the loan, all members are excluded from future access to credit. Therefore, the peer pressure to fulfil agreements is very strong. 17. There are several steps that the Government can take to improve the rural credit market. The first, which is already part of the policy agenda of the present government, is to encourage the development of both formal and informal credit markets by desisting from intervening with credit subsidies and directed credit. Second, providing marketable titles to land and improving the foreclosure process will also stimulate private activity in rural credit. However, the issue of rural financial markets is too complex to be addressed here and will be the subject of a future World Bank study. 2/ Since farmers know their riskiness better than the provider of insurance, farmers whose probability of loss is greater are more prone to buy the insurance; this is known as the adverse selection problem. Moreover, once the farmers have insurance, they no longer have adequate incentives to avoid risk. Since their actions cannot be observed, the insurance agreement cannot stipulate the practices and actions farmers are to take. This is referred to in the insurance literature as the moral hazard problem (Newbery and Stiglitz, 1981' - 51 - ANNEX 4: THE EFFECTS OF LAND TENURE 1. This chapter draws on the land tenure literature and the experience of other countries to explain the types of effects that may result in Venezuela from a change in property rights on land. Typically the results are positive in terms of income distribution and economic efficiency. The chapter will provide useful information on the effects of land tenure on various measures. The discussion will allow policy makers to anticipate the types of benefits likely to accrue when clear land holdings become more common in Venezuela and may help alleviate the concern that free land markets will result in the reconstitution of latifundias. A. On Farm Size and Farm Output 2. The relationship between land tenure and farm size in Latin America is an indirect one that evolved through the latifundio-minifundio structure begun during colonial rule, and extended into the mid-Twentieth Century. Those with secure tenure were the few large landowners (latifundistas) who controlled almost all the country's productive farm land. The vast majority of farmers had access to only very small parcels of land, often less than or barely enough for subsistence. 3. Access was gained under several arrangements, none providing secure tenure. The most common was the granting of usufruct parcels on the latifundio estates, in exchange for which the farmer and family were obligated to provide agricultural and domestic service, under feudal conditions. Failure to satisfy the obligations could lead to dismissal from the hacienda. The feudal aspects of this system were the norm until the 1950s and 1960s. 4. Another tenure system was freeholding minifundio, where peasant farmers had managed to maintain small semi-subsistence farms around villages or in isolated mountainous regions. Both of these systems could be seen combined with renting or sharecropping on latifindio lands. Most of the land available to the small farmers was of marginal quality. 5. This system came under both internal and external pressure in the 1950s and 1960s throughout Latin America, for equity, efficiency and political stability reasons. The objectives of the Venezuelan agrarian reform were to break the lati.fundio-minijundio system, and to incorporate small farmers into the mainstream of the economy. As stated in the law's announcement, "The objective of this law is to transform the agrarian structure of the country and to incorporate the rural population into the national economic, social and political development, by means of substituting the latifundia system with a just system of property, tenure and exploitation of the land, based on the equitable distribution of land, the adequate organization of credit and integral technical assistance for producers so that land constitutes, for those who work it, the base of his economic stability, the foundation of his social well-being and the guarantee of his liberty and dignity" (Soto 1988, p. 83). 6. There is agreement among the free market technocrats and the agraristas in Venezuela, that the distribution of land under the Agrarian Reform resulted in farm sizes that are too small, and thus limit agricultural development. A leading agrarista, Oscar David Soto (1988), maintains that the process has not yet found a prototype productive unit that will allow the beneficiary to rationally use - 52 - ANNEX 4 the available resource, resulting in farmers that are too small, too isolated, and thus incapable of "adapting to modern scale economies and commercial production possibilities" (Soto 1988 P. 51). The response, however, is different depending on each side's point of view. The free market proponents emphasize the need for a market to determine the proper, presumably larger, farm size, while the agraristas prefer cooperative/collective organizations. 7. With respect to whether large farms or small farms are more "efficient," there are really two questions involved: (1) What is the engineering relationship of production per inputs actually used in the production process?; and (2) What is the degree of utilization of the available land resources and the related use of labor?2' Distinction between these two questions helps to organize the information available. 8. With regard to the first issue, regional data from Latin America have shown that the returns to scale are approximately constant in developing country agriculture and, therefore, neutral with respect to the more general issue of farm size as related to output per unit area.4 In fact, it is common to observe even large plantations repeating many-fold the operations carried out by the single farmer on a small family establishment, so that changes in efficiency with scale are not the norm in Latin America. 9. It is the second issue--that of utilization--that is perhaps the most important one. "In an agricultural structure composed of verv large estates holding most of the land on the one hand, and a large number of small farms on the other, agricultural production tends to be below its maximum potential level because land is under-used on the large farms, wh-le excess labor without opportunity for fully productive work is crowded onto the small farm sector. "' 10. In Latin America, a number of studies have presented data supporting the conclusion that small farmers (characterized by intensive land use) are more productive than their larger counterparts (characterized by under-utilization of land)Y Productivity is greater on small farms because of their intensity of resource use, even though large farms are characterized by higher-valued export crops and greater yields.2' One recent paper provides a comprehensive economic analysis of this phenomena, integrating land with labor and capital markets and arrives at the same conclusionY 3/ R. Albert Berry and William R. Cline, Aerarian Structure and Productivity in Developing Countres (1979), p. S. 4/ Berry and Cline, op.cit. p. 5. 5/ Berry and Cline, op.cit. p. 7. 6/ See, for example, Hans P. Binswanger and Miranda Elgin, 'What are the Prospects for Land Reform," (World Bank, Report No. IDP-21, Aug. 1988) p. 3; Berry and Cline, o2cit. p. 7; Tulio Barbosa and John Strasma, 'Land Tenure and Productivity in Maranhao: Some Empirical Evidence," (Land Tenure Center) 1980; and William C. Thiesenhusen and Jolyne Meltmed-Sanjak, "Brazil's Agrarian Structure: Changes from 1970 through 1980," V/orld Development 18:393415 (1990). 7/ Thiesenhusen and Melmed-Sanjak, op. cit. pp. 393415. 8/ Michael R. Carter and Dina Mesbah, "Economic Theory of Land Markets and its Implications for the Land Access of the Rural Poor," Annex I p. II, in Eric B. Shearer, Susana Lastarria-Comhiel and Dina Mesbah, "The Reform of Rural (continued...) - 53 - ANNEX 4 11. Similar results have been recorded in Jamaica. There, the best land in the country is held in large estates and has been extensively farmed. Yet this land has had the lowest level of return per acre, despite having the physical and financial resources to produce more intensively. In contrast, small farmers, situated on hillsides, performing both land- and labor-intensive agriculture, have contributed a higher return per unit of land.2' In a World Bank study on plot size and productivity, it was shown that, all other things remaining constant, a tenant's optimal effort per hectare is a decreasing function of the size of the plot he cultivates.'°' 12. While the factors that underlie the high yields per land unit on small farms come into play whenever a large farm is split into small ones, such productivity also depends on the operators.-L' The pay-off to expanding the land under small farms and increasing its productivity also depends on how long the country will have surplus labor at low opportunity cost. It is often asserted that "...large farmers are more dynamic in the adoption of technological innovations. The premises are that their superior education makes them more aware of technical advances, and that their greater margin for risk-taking and access to capital enables them to shift to new techniques sooner."9' But this supposition has not received empirical sup,"ort. Using data in Colombia, Pakistan and India, Berry and Cline (page 28) concluded that "The popular association of mechanization with more dynamic adoption of new techniques is generally erroneous. Large-farm adoption of mechanized techniques may just as well reflect the distortions of the factor price incentives facing them (cheaper capital, dearer labor) away from the social scarcity values of factors, as any technical superiority over small farms in the appropriate choice of modern techniques... Even though the larger farms are likely to be the first to adopt innovations, small farms are likely to follow -- and sometimes do so very soon." 13. Griffin (1989) sums up this literature, concluding that there is abundant evidence from all over the Third World that factor productivity tends to vary systematically with farm size. Three findings in particular seem well established: (a) output per worker tends to increase with farm size; (b) gross output per ha (or yield) tends to fall as the size of farm increases; and, (c) value added (or net income) per ha also tends to fall as the size of farm rises. The agronomic reasons for this are by now clear. First, small farmers use more labor-intensive methods of cultivation for any given crop. They devote more time and are more careful in land 8/(. . .continued) Land Markets in Latin America and the Caribbean: Research, Theory, and Policy Implications," LTC Paper No. 141 (June 1990). 29 Randy Stringer, John Bruce and David Stanfield, "Reform among the Smaliholders: St. Lucia, Jamaica. and Implications for the Caribbean," in William Thiesenhusen, Searching for Agrarian Reform in Latiin America (1988). LO/ Agrarian Reforms in Developing Rural Econujini.s Characterized by Interlinked Credit and Tenancy Market," World Bank Staff Working Paper, No. 433 (Oct. 1980). 11/ Berry and Cline, op.cit., p. 3. 12/ Berry and Cline, op.cit., p. 27. - 54 - ANNEX 4 preparation, weeding and harvesting. Large farmers, in contrast, use more capital-intensive methods of cultivation, substituting agricultural chemicals and machinery for labor. A partial exception is fertilizer. In many countries, particularly in Asia, the intensity of fertilizer use is invariant with respect to size of landholdings and some cases have been found in which small farmers actually apply more fertilizer per ha than large. 14. Using cross country national macro-level data, Prosterman and Riedinger (1987) arrive at similar conclusions. Their research showed that only the system of small owner-operator farming has consistently demonstrated an ability to achieve high productivity. Among 117 countries, eleven of the top fourteen countries in terms of productivity are countries in which the system of small owner-operators is dominant. Of the remaining three, two (Great Britain and New Zealand) have a system of larger single-family owner-operated farms; and the third (North Korea) has a collective system. When one adds characterizations based on models of the nonowners's perception of his enforceable legal rights, it becomes overwhelmingly evident that not just formal sharecroppers but all non-owners, to the extent that they have responsibility for investment decisions, will undertake far less in the way of agricultural improvements than owner-cultivators (Prosterman and Riedinger 1987). 15. Owner-cultivators, when they make improvements, can expect to reap the full profit from those improvements. They can internalize all the benefits of their investment. Moreover, capital improvements that generally have the greatest effect in increasing productivity, such as water management and irrigation, require a multi-year presence on the land for the investment to be recouped. Tenants often lack any reasonable assurance of such a multi-year association with that piece of land. What is even worse, the very making of productivity-enhancing improvements by a t'nant may initiate a process in which the landlord takes back the improved land for self-cultivation or for cultivation by a more favored person, or charges the tenant a higher rent for the improved land. Perceiving these various risks, the tenant is overwhelmingly likely to decide not to invest in most of the improvements that an owner-operator would make (Prosterman and Riedinger, 1987). 16. Making titles freely transferable means that agglomeration of landholdings would be possible. But given that there is not an automatic economic benefit via efficiency for agglomeration of land'ioldings beyond a certain size, this is unlikely to occur. Granting freehold interests allows the market to determine ownership and size. Property will flow to its most productive use. As we have seen, large estates are not more productive than the small estates. Thus, it is unlikely that property will be consolidated by the largeholders, even though the Venezuelan government would be allowing such a possibility to exist legally."' There would be consolidation of suboptimal sized units, so that peasant farmers could emerge to become small commercial farmers. This would be a desirable outcome. 17. The conclusion that agglomeration of landholdings is unlikely depends, however, on the assumption that the market is functioning properly. This may not be the case. Smallholders in Venezuela may have less access to capital. If this is true, then consolidation biased in favor of large creditworthy landholders may occur. 13/ Ecuador is moving away from the latifundio via the market mcchanism. Carlos Camacho, Evaluaci6n del Proceso de Cambio en la Tenencia de la Ticrra en la Sierra Norte v Central (1964-1991) (Quito. 1991). -55- ANNEX 4 18. To summarize, large landholdings are not necessarily more efficient than small landholdings. Granting freehold interest to all landholders would allow the market to decide optimal farm size. If the market is functioning properly, it is unlikely that concentration of landholdings would occur to an extent that would exclude ownership by a large share of the rural population. What will happen is that resources will flow to their most productive use, whether that be large, medium or small farms. B. On Product Mix 19. Owner-operated and partly-rented holdings tend to be predominantly food producing and show a greater degree of diversification of production among food crops. Griffin (1989) concludes that small farmers tend to choose relatively more labor-intensive crops, such as vegetables, whereas large farmers devote a higher proportion of their land to activities which require relatively less labor such as grazing livestock. Small farmers also cultivate a higher proportion of their land, whereas one finds that on large farms a higher proportion is left idle, or fallow, is used for pasture, or is forest. Finally, the cropping ratio tends to be higher on small farms. That is, because of greater use of multiple cropping techniques, small farmers obtain more harvests per year than large farmers. In Venezuela, Hernandez and Prato (1986) found the same tendency among agrarian reform beneficiaries. Horticulture crops, potatoes and dairy displaced wheat and sugar cane when land is subdivided. 20. For those farmers without secure tenure - whether or not they hold formal title, are squatters or are renters - production is often based on crops with short production cycles. Vegetables will be planted rather than tree-crops, and chickens and pigs will be raised rather than cattle. Further, any input with carryover benefits to the next season or production cycle, such as some fertilizers and many cultural practices, will be used sub-optimally as the farmer fears that he will not be able to capture all the benefits. It is only when tenure is secure that farmers are free to select from the entire range of alternatives and have a planning horizon that extends beyond one crop or one rental contract. In Venezuela, agrarian reform beneficiaries have tenure security though they do not have freehold title. Yet their production alternatives are limited to those crops dictated under the agrarian reform legislation. Likewise, many other smallholders without clear title do not have that security and this is reflected in the type of production that they undertake. A policy of regularizing titles, providing freehold interests, and lifting cropping restrictions would allow individual operators freedom to select that set of products which is optimum for their circumstances. C. On Rural Employment 21. Rural employment opportunities, the lack of them and the need for them, is one of the most basic and intractable development and social problem in developing countries. Much o.' the rural-urban migration and the attendant problems are the result of a severe lack of rural opportunity. In Venezuela, as in most countries, despite massive migration, the rural population continues to grow (Rojas de lo Porto 1985) and look for rural employment opportunities. 22. The effect of agrarian structure and tenure on absorption of the rural population have periodically been recognized, but generally have not been a basis for development policy. An early recognition of the broader social and employment role of agriculture was by Wynn Owen (1966). He used the term "farm financed social welfare" to describe the role that family farms played in - 56 - ANNEX 4 providing employment, housing, food and education, which would not be available had people left the farm. The key point in his argument was that the family farm provided this social safety net and provided it to a larger population, while other forms of agriculture do not. 23. On the other hand, large farms in Latin America, both the traditional hacienda and modern farms, never have been known for their labor absorption. Barraclough and Domike (1966) found that while latifundios were on average 400 times larger than minundios, they employed only 15 times as many workers. In Colombia and Guatemala, for example, sub-family and family farms had 30% and 28% of the agricultural land, respectively, but 89% and 81 % of the agricultural work force. The labor absorption per ha on small private farms and individually operated ejidos was 175% and 72% greater, respectively, than on large private farms in Mexico (World Bank 1978). 24. The reason for this phenomenon is straightforward. Pressures for the adoption of labor-saving farm technology in Latin America are similar to those in industry. Accordingly, the trend on large farms in Latin America is toward use of less and less labor per unit of output. Some countries inadvertently follow policies which encourage this effect. Overvalued exchange rates and credit subsidies enable those who mechanize to obtain imported farm machinery as reduced cost. Mechanization is primarily labor displacing and usually does not elevate production as much as equivalent expenditures on yield increasing inputs such as fertilizers, hybrid seeds, and insecticides. (Ihiesenhusen 1971). 25. Venezuela's small farms were, and still are, in greater need for social and physical infrastructural investment of all types than are other farm types, because of their origin. First, if the reform farms were created from expropriated or purchased latifundios, by definition they would have been severely deficient in modern investment, management, and perhaps land quality. Eckstein states that these farms were undercapitalized in the early years of the agrarian reform (World Bank 1978). Second, after the first few years, most of the reform units were created from public lands. Again, by definition these were on the frontiers and without any modern infrastructure, and probably of much lower quality. Investment was not made in these lands, nor the beneficiaries, to allow them to reach productive potential. On the contrary, the public effort was reduced a. the time when most reformed parcels were coming from public lands (Soto 1988). So, the need was greater, the cost was greater, but the amount available was much less. Soto (1988) also identifies a lack of marketing infrastructure and linkages as severe bottlenecks to the reformed sector contributing to the productive process. D. On Natural Resource Management 26. Land tenure policies are relevant to resource management in a number of ways. Without well-defined property boundaries nature reserves and parks cannot protect themselves from encroachment by squatters and land invaders. In Venezuela, the lack of a national cadastre makes clear determination of such boundaries difficult. In addition, the many properties that are not titled further complicate the determination of tenure, let alone boundaries. While studies show that people who have been farmers (including cattle ranchers practicing extensive grazing) consider the creation of national park boundaries as limiting their rights to use these lands, property delineations proved helpful "...for the planning of development projects which affect the land, such as soil and water conservation, watershed management programs, technological transfer oriented toward particular crops, as well as programs oriented to the solution of problems of extreme poverty due to -57- ANNEX 4 fragmentation of land."'` Titling around reserves, combined with access by farmers to affordable intensification technologies, helps stabilize land use in surrounding areas.)l' Similar results will result as Venezuela becomes increasingly involved in property formalization. 27. Peasants often invade reserves because of the lack of a land market where they could purchase or rent land. Titling of property allows the landless to purchase land in titled areas, diminishing the need for invasion of reserves. In Venezuela's case, land invasions of reserves is occurring but do not seem chronic. People sometimes invade forest reserve areas to access resources such as timber. When residents of a forest reserve and a game reserve were compared in Uganda, the two groups had differing expectations of their tenure rights and behaved accordingly.-LI People on the game reserve felt secure in their rights, and planted trees, mulched soils and built permanent structures, while those in the forest reserve had temporary housing and engaged in short-term, extractive practice. The difference between the groups was security of ownership. 28. Titling of property surrounding the reserve may promote investment in renewable resources in these areas. This in turn may relieve some of the pressure to invade reserves. In other words, land security in outside property will encourage the use of outside property as an alternative to the reserve. This was also found to be the case in Madagascar.' Thus, titling would have the added benefit of assisting Venezuela to manage and protect its natural resources and forest reserves. 29. Land-titling also pro- ides incentives to individual landowners to engage in environmentally and agriculturally sound (sustainable) practices. Further, people who have security in their land tenure may depend less on reserves, and may be more willing to plant trees and other long-term crops.1s' Conversely, if landowners lose secure tide, they lose an incentive to plant trees. In Venezuela, on land where landholders have insecure or no titde, only annual crops and livestock are raised. On agrarian reform land, although not fully titled, owners are secure and therefore cultivate tree crops. This casual-empirical finding is in agreement with a study in Amazona which found that "the lack of secure title and the precarious defacto hold over land mean that reinvestment in erosion control, fertilizer, and irrigation are... both costly and irrational.2' 14/ David Stanfield, Edgar Nesman, Mitchell Seligson and Alexander Coles, 'The Honduras Land Titling and Registration Experience," (LTC paper, 1990) p. 11. 15/ See, for example, Stonich's observations based on data in . induras, in William C. Thiesenhusen, 'Implications of the Rural Land Tenure System for the Environmental Debate: Three Scenarios," to be published in J. Develozina Areas (1991). 16/ John Aluma, Christine Drennon, John Kigula, Ste-en W. Lawry, E.S.K. Muwanga-Zake and John Were, "Settlement in Forest Reserves, Game Reserves and National Parks in Uganda," (LTC Research Paper 98) (1989). 17/ World Bank and the Govemment of Madagascar, Environmental Ation Plan (Washington DC, 1989). 18/ John W. Bruce and Louise Fortmann, Aaroforestrv: Proprietarv Dimensions (San Francisco, 1989). For the African case regarding forestry, fuelwood and resource conservation projects, see John W. Bruce, Land Tenure Issues in Proiect Design and Strategies for Agricultural Development in Sub-Sahai. Africa (Madison, 1985) p. xix. 19/ Noted by William Thiesenhusen, citing Schmink and Wook, "'Political Ecology' of Amazona," p. 41. - 58 - ANNEX 4 30. Freely-transferable titles in Venezuela would provide property buyers with access to land. Lack of access to quality land may increase environmental degradation.A One report concluded that: "Examining the relation of unequal resource distribution to the environment involves a recognition that groups of users place differential demands on resources; the poor have a proximate, direct effect on them, while the impact of those who own ample land and water is indirect but just as decisive in determining resource destruction. If the environmental problem is to be alleviated, the lock which large landlords have on most of the productive resources in some Third World areas must be substantially modified or broken through land reform. Problems of deforestation, for example, probably need to be solved in the major farming regions of the countries involved, far from the site of actual resource damage."2" 31. In summary, the evidence from other countries indicates that Venezuela could improve its environmental management of its natural resources by (i) establishing a national cadastre, (ii) providing formal title to landholders, and (iii) making all titles transferable. 20/ William C. Thiesenhusen, "Implications of the Rural Land Tenure System for the Environmental Debate: Three Scenarios," J. of Developing Areas (accepted for publication, 1991). Li/ William C. Thiesenhusen, "Have Agricultural Economists Neglected Poverty Issues?" (Lecture at the Annual Meetings of the Pakistan Society of Development Economists, Islamabad, 5-11 Jan., 1991) p. 19. - 59 - ANNEX 5: A STRATEGY TO IMPROVE CADASTRAL INFORMATION AND CREATEA VIABLE UP-TO-DATE CADASTREIN VENEZUELA4 1. The present cadastre is out of date and parts of tde cadastre, such as IAN, operate as autonomous institutions without clearly defined or uniform policies. Although IAN is responsible for the provision of titles on tierras baldfas, no systematic survey of all land has been carried out in Venezuela. Areas nominally known to be tierras baldfas are identified, but all areas are not systematically surveyed to determine the origins of titles. This non-systematic approach has created a suspect cadastral base and over the long term, could limit attempts to create a viable, up-to-date cadastre in Venezuela. 2. Approximately 64% of the titles provide by IAN over the past thirty-one years are considered insecure and cannot be converted into definitive titles. These statistics reflect the present delicate cadastre situation in Venezuela. However, a strong program of land tenure regularization based on a sound technical foundation would create conditions for the government to extend the benefits of secure land ownership to a large number of small farmers and improve the government's ability to administer land resources. 3. The cadastral component of the project would establish a strong land administration with unified policies, legislation and procedures. In this regard, the project would: (a) develop uniform standards which would ensure the incegration of project activities within the content of national land administration: (b) introduce sound, cost-effective management principles; (c) improve inter-agency collaboration; (d) expand the use of appropriate technical packages to create a technically sound cadastral data base; (e) finance intensive staff training; and (f) improve the quality and ef.iciency of contract procurement and contract awarJs. 4. The land adjudication process would be systematically applied to all parcels within municipalities and target districts to ensure maximum publicity, make the best use of local inhabitant knowledge and resources, and minimize unit costs. The review of all deeds recorded in the land registry would be followed by in-the-field aerial photogranmnetry (orthophoto maps). The participation of property rightholders would be compulsory. Concrete monuments would be located and accurate geodetic positioning of these monuments would be determined by determined by Global Positioning Systems (GPS) thus tying all property boundaries into the national geodetic and facilitating the identification of property boundaiies in the future. The monumentation costs would be covered by the project with one corner monument identifying the corner of three or four contingent parcels. Additional monument location and placement would be at the parcel owners' cost. To the extent possible, land adjudication would be carried out in the field under the direction of a land adjudication team composed of a chief of party, an attorney, a land surveyor and an agronomist. The location of most land boundaries would be resolved between adjacent property owners in the field using the 22/ This annex was prepared by John McKenna, LATAG, World Bank, for the Interamerican Development Bank. It has been edited for inclusion here. - 60 - ANNEX 5 orthophoto maps; the land adjudication team would then survey the property boundaries and implant concrete property boundary monuments. The surveyed line would be then drawn on the orthophoto map as surveyed in the field and agreed among all adjacent property owners. Any disputes arising from the land adjudication process would be initially resolved by the administration officials. 6. All information generated by the land adjudication process would be entered into a computerized cadastral data bank system which would provide the government with a comprehensive, permanent and maintainable land administration tool with multiple legal, financial and development functions. It would ensure the publicity of land ownership and land transactions (i.e., sales and land transfers' that provide the legal basis for the titles produced. Details of the project features follow. Aerial Photography 7. Aerial photography operations would cover some 17.0 million hectares to address project needs. Some 14.0 million hectares would be flown at a scale of 1:75,000 and the remaining 3.0 million hectares, located in areas of denser land settlement and smaller parcel size, would be photographed at a scale of 1:20,000. The basic photographic outputs would be negatives, diapositives and contact prints. 8. Ground control, aerial triangulation and mapping activities leading to the production of orthophoto maps at 1:25,000 scale for the majority of the project area and at 1:5,000 scale for areas of small land holdings would cover all photographed areas. All ground control points against which the photographs and subsequent field operations would be referenced would be pre-signalized for ease of identification of control points in subsequent aerial triangulation work. Ground control operations would be carried out using either conventional geodetic methods, airborne inertial positioning systems, Doppler Transit Satellite system or through GPS methods. Aerial triangulation would be carried out using automatic coordinate recording devices and bundle block adjustment software programs. Cadastre Implementation and TItling 10. All geographic and literal information obtained through the preceding stages would be digitized for computerized storage, retrieval, processing and eventual production of title documents for rural properties. The computerized cadastral data base should incorporate a structured query language (SQL) to facilitate access and retrieval of data. About 30% of these titles would be recognition documents for valid titles issued by past administrations. Data obtained through the establishment of the cadastre would be regularly updated, and data pertaining to the public domain would be made available through a fee charge to all public and private users. - 61 - ANNEX 6: SUCCESSFUL SMALL FARMER SCHEMES IN EL SALVADOR AND DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 23, 1. Many agricultural credit programs in Latin America founder, in part because interest rates are too low to cover operating costs and the true cost of obtaining loanable funds.& However, the biggest cost component is usually losses for uncollectible loans. The delinquency rate is often more than 20% and may reach 50% or more. It is not possible to cover such a loss rate with the interest rate charged to borrowers who do repay. 2. Various governments in Central America and the Caribbean are now considering the feasibility of creating financing facilities to enable the landless and small farmers to buy parcels of farm land in the market. Like agricultural production credit, if a Land Bank is to be viable and replicable, borrowers must repay debts. Given decades of traditionai governmental tolerance of non- payment of production debt and of land debts under land reform programs, it will not be easy to persuade borrowers that the "rules" have changed. 3. Nonetheless, it is possible to eliminate delinquency as a major part of operating costs of credit programs and this dnnex describes two programs, one public and one private, in which lenders actually obtain 100% collection of loans at low costs. The first uses long-term leases with an option to buy, as a method of land purchase finance. The second uses a novel, temporary, peer intervention as the method of collecting production credit without the costs of foreclosure. Land Sales in El Salvador 4. The record of campesino payment of land debts in El Salvador is very poor. Before the 1980 land reforms, the Banco de Fomento Agropecuario had financed the transfer of about a dozen farms to cooperatives; the Bank paid the former owner, and then the cooperative failed to repay the Bank. The state-owned Bank was unable to evict the cooperative, and the loans were just rolled over year after year. 5. Meanwhile a commercial real estate broker has developed a successful program that could be adapted to rural land. The broker divides suburban lands into house lots, which he sells on long-term leases with an option to buy, by merely making the last payment on time. The advantage of this method is that in El Salvador it is easy to evict someone for non-payment of rent, whereas foreclosure of a mortgage is a long and difficult process. 6. Knowing that he will be evicted promptly if he fails to make a payment, the land buyer makes the necessary effort to keep up to date. The broker has one resident employee at each subdivision who collects payments and counsels the delinquent to sell their rights to someone else, 23/ This section is taken from "Making Land Banks Viable, Two Successful Approaches to Collecting Loans Made to Small Farmers in Latin America," by John Strasma, Proceedings of IAAE, Tokyo, 1991. 24/ The classic critique of "soft" agricultural lending programs in Latin America is by Dale W. Adams and Douglas H. Graham, Undermining Rural Development with Cheap Credit. Colorado: Westview Press, 1984. - 62 - AN-NEX6 rather than be evicted. The new buyer simply assumes the remainder of the debt; the former buyer gets back whatever part of his investment he can persuade the new buyer to pay him. 7. According to the broker, delinquency has never exceeded 8% of amounts due, and that occurs at Christmas time, when it is the broker's policy to tolerate one overdue payment where the employee believes the hard luck story told by the buyer. However, by the time the second payment is overdue, the buyer/tenant must pay or move out. Almost all pay. 8. Most of this broker's business is in ten suburban subdivisions, which are sold as house and garden lots rather than for farming. Based on experience, he strongly prefers to sell to campesinos and not to the urban middle and professional class. The campesinos are honest and live on their lots so the broker's employee can find them easily when payment is overdue. 9. When an urban professional buys a lot for a weekend pleasure retreat and gets behind on payments, he has to be pursued by telephone or with a trip to the city. He hides behind a secretary or tells you "the check is in the mail," raising the cost of collection and eviction. And at times the broker himself must deal with politically influential debtors, whereas his field agent can deal with the campesinos or urban poor who buy most of his lots. 10. The broker's principal difficulty is finding landowners willing to sell on his model, under which the seller agrees to accept payment at the rate (typically, eight years) at which the buyer pays. However, his model appears to be 100% successful in dealing with loan delinquency. And unlike the land reform, there is no doubt about when and how the buyer gets clear registered anr negotiable title to the land: just make the last payment. The program demonstrates that full recovery of debts is possible if one sets up an effective mechanism that evicts the debtor at low cost in the event of non-payment. Agricultural Production Credit in the Dominican Republic 11. The Agricultural Bank (BAGRICOLA) of the Dominican Republic, part of the public sector, has been no more successful at collecting loans made than have most similar institutions elsewhere. However, their loans to rice grower cooperatives achieve virtually 100% repayments due to the invention of temporary peer intervention in place of traditional collection methods. 12. The Bank makes one loan, wholesale, to each Cooperative. These are made up of land reform beneficiaries who now farm individual parcels, but use the Cooperatives to solve problems of input supplies, land preparation, and access to credit. The Cooperative then onlends to each member. 13. All members of each Cooperative accept liability for the production credit debts of all other members. Members agree in advance that when a member is delinquent in repayment, the group may seize his parcel immediately, without legal proceedings. The parcel is then farmed by the cooperative itself or is rented out to a member who can handle more land. With the cash thus obtained, the cooperative reimburses itself for the loan repayment it made on behalf of the delinquent borrower. 14. This model is now five years old, and according to the Bank and to Cooperative leaders interviewed, it is working perfectly. The president of one of these cooperatives was unable to repay -63 - ANNEX 6 all of their own production debts in 1990. At a cooperative meeting he acknowledged that he was aware of the rules and that in order to make it clear that the rules apply to all, he was leaving his parcels for six months so that the cooperative could rent out the parcels and pay off the debts due. 15. For success, of course, it is essential that the amount of debt due not exceed the rental value of the parcel. This is attainable when the debt is production credit, with the loan being a fraction of the value of this harvest expected. It might not be possible when the debt includes principal and interest on a land debt. 16. These two programs show that it is possible to achieve 100% recovery of debts from campesinos if one insists on it, and sets up a mechanism that evicts the debtor at low cost in the event of non-payment. 17. Success also means that governments and lenders must abandon any paternalistic attitude that assumes that campesino land buyers must be kept on the land even if they do not make enough money farming to meet their debt service. On the contrary, those who suffer personal misfortunes or are not successful farmers for whatever other reason, must be allowed to transfer their land to another campesino and move on. 18. This often means repealing present laws or rules that forbid a campesino from selling his assigned parcel to someone else. The essence of the success of the two programs described is that they have both succeeded in evading these rules. he program in El Salvador is set up as a lease, not a sale, but upon making the final agreed-upon payment, the lessor gets the parcel with a full freehold title, duly registered in his or her name. And the lessor/buyer just assumes the balance of the debt due. 19. In the Dominican Republic, the program works because the land reform agency and the government bank look the other way. Despite laws prohibiting rents and the transfer of land reform parcels, the debtor's friends and neighbors foreclose, temporarily, on the delinquent borrower and rent his parcel out for cash with which to pay off his overdue debt. Thus the campesinos themselves overcome one of the problems associated with inalienable land titles to campesinos. - 64 - ANNEX6 Annex 7: GinI Index Values for Concentration of Land Ownership in 54 Countries In Vlarious Years gl A. NUMBER OF COUNTRIES IN RANGE Range of Index Values Latin American Countries Other Non-industrial _/ Industrial Countries c/ .80 and over 12 3 3 .70 to .79 5 4 4 .60 to .69 0 7 4 .SOto.59 0 4 3 .40 to .50 0 3 3 Total 17 | 21 17 B. GINI VALUES FOR SELECTED LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES Bolivia .94 Brazil .84 Venezuela .89 El Salvador .83 Peru .88 Uruguay .82 Guatemala .86 Dominican Republic .79 Ecuador .86 Honduras .76 Colombia .86 Nicaragua .76 Argentina .86 Panama .74 Mexico .69 a/ Years when data were available, usualy the 1960s. For three countries, index values prior to and after land reform were available. Pre- and post-reform values were, respectively: Mexico 0.96-0.69; Egypt 0.81-0.67; Taiwan 0.65-0.46. _/ Countries from Asia, North Africa, Southem Europe, plus Jamaica. c/ Industrial countries are deftned as those having less than 30 percent of their labor force employed in agriculture. Source: Samuel P. Huntington, Political Order in Changing Societies (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1968) Table 6.2, p. 382. I ~ 9 o io n 8 -_V I ' /05p CJ -m ~ p .- -I 8 t- -f -, r . t0 0 %,-:- ;'i d \' x a-' 0I ( \ ,X r- f/ 4rr ) °< ')O \ ) 7 >1 w - . "-s > N \ ~ 7 K;~~t Np i>0 };Es / _O.I__.r__. ___1_