Article of the Month -
November 2006
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World Bank Support for Land Administration and Management: Responding to the
Challenges of the Millennium Development Goals
Mr. Keith Clifford BELL, World Bank
This article in .pdf-format.
1) This paper is written and presented at the XXIII FIG Congress in
Munich, Germany, 8-13 October 2006.
Keywords: good governance, land administration, land management,
land policy, land reform, Millennium Development Goals, tenure security,
World Bank.
SUMMARY
Land and property are generally the major assets in any economy. In most
countries, land may account for between half to three-quarters of national
wealth. Land is a fundamental factor for agricultural production and is thus
directly linked to food security. Security of land tenure is an important
foundation for economic development, social and environmental management,
and also for supporting reconstruction following a disaster or conflict.
There are many complexities, dimensions and themes associated with land
administration and management. Securing land rights is particularly relevant
to vulnerable groups such as the poor, women, orphans, displaced persons and
ethnic minority groups. Fees and taxes on land are often a significant
source of government revenue, particularly at the local level. In most
societies, there are many competing demands on land including development,
agriculture, pasture, forestry, industry, infrastructure, urbanization,
biodiversity, customary rights, ecological and environmental protection.
Many countries have great difficulty in balancing the needs of these
competing demands. Land continues to be a cause of social, ethnic, cultural
and religious conflict. For many centuries, many wars and revolutions have
been fought over rights to land. Throughout history, virtually all
civilizations have devoted considerable efforts to defining rights to land
and in establishing institutions to administer these rights, i.e. land
administration systems.
Reform of land administration in any country is a long-term prospect
requiring decades of sustained commitment. It is a major investment of
capital and human resources and requires strong and consistent leadership in
order to achieve effective, sustainable outcomes. The World Bank, with the
support of development partners and civil society organizations, are
continuing to support land projects throughout the world. These projects
have had varying emphases on social equity and economic development. In
post-conflict countries, tenure security and access to land are major
factors in providing long-term stability.
This paper outlines the World Bank’s support for land reform programs to
meet the challenges of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), and presents
the reconstruction of land and property rights in Aceh, Indonesia, as a
special case study.
1. INTRODUCTION
Reform of land administration in any country is a long-term prospect
requiring decades of sustained commitment. It is a major investment of
capital and human resources and requires strong, consistent, transparent and
accountable leadership, in order to achieve effective, sustainable outcomes.
The World Bank, with the support of development partners and civil society
organizations, are continuing to support, land projects throughout the
world. These projects have varying degrees of emphasis on social equity and
economic development. In post-conflict countries, tenure security and access
to land are major factors in providing long-term stability.
2. THE IMPORTANCE OF LAND
Land and property are generally the major assets in any economy. In most
countries, land accounts for between half to three-quarters of national
wealth. Land is a fundamental factor for agriculture production and is thus
directly linked to food security. Over the past two decades, much has been
written about land being one of the main sources of collateral, used to
obtain credit from established financial institutions such as banks, as well
as from informal providers of credit.
Former United States President, Mr. Bill Clinton, who now serves as the
United Nations (UN) Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery, following his first
visit to Aceh, on May 23, 2005, advised:
I can think of nothing that will generate more income over the long
run for average families in this region than actually having title to the
land they own. Then, they will be able to borrow money and build a much
more diversified, much more modern economy.
On July 14, 2005, Mr. Clinton presented his first report on Aceh to the
UN Economic and Social Council, (ECOSOC) in New York City, and advised:
Those of you familiar with the work of Mr. (Hernando) de Soto around
the world and similar projects know that the world’s poor people have
roughly 5 trillion dollars in assets that are totally unusable for
economic growth because they don’t have title to them so they can’t get
credit using what they own as collateral. This is going to be done through
the World Bank grant in Aceh. It is very forward thinking on both the part
of the World Bank and Indonesia but I hope that the other countries
affected will do that and in its pursuit of the Millennium Development
Goals, I hope that you, Mr. President and ECOSOC, can have an influence in
urging this sort of project to be done in other countries outside the
tsunami affected areas.
Security of tenure is an important foundation for social and economic
development. Fees and taxes on land are often a significant source of
government revenue, particularly at the local level. Securing land rights is
particularly relevant to vulnerable groups such as the poor, women and
indigenous groups. In most societies, there are many competing demands on
land including development, agriculture, pasture, forestry, industry,
infrastructure, urbanization, biodiversity, customary rights, ecological and
environmental protection. Many countries have great difficulty in balancing
the needs of these competing demands. Land has been a cause of social,
ethnic, cultural and religious conflict and many wars and revolutions have
been fought over rights to land. Throughout history, virtually all
civilizations have devoted considerable efforts to defining rights to land
and in establishing institutions to administer these rights – land
administration systems.
3. THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
The Millennium Development Goals (MDG) commit the international community
to an expanded vision for development, one that vigorously promotes human
development as the key to sustaining social and economic progress in all
countries, and recognizes the importance of creating a global partnership
for development. The goals have been commonly accepted as a framework for
measuring development progress. The MDG constructively challenges the entire
global community. On the one hand, the MDG challenge poor countries to
demonstrate good governance and commitment to poverty reduction. On the
other hand the MDG also challenge the more wealthy countries to maintain
their commitment to support economic and social development (World Bank
2002).
Many of the targets of the MDGs were first set out by international
conferences and summits held during the 1990s. They were later compiled and
became known as the International Development Goals. In September 2000 the
member states of the United Nations unanimously adopted the Millennium
Declaration (UN, 2000). Following consultations among international
agencies, including the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF),
the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the
specialized agencies of the United Nations, the General Assembly recognized
the MDG as part of the roadmap for implementing the Millennium Declaration.
The eight MDG are:
- Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
- Goal 2. Achieve universal primary education
- Goal 3 Promote gender equality and empower women
- Goal 4 Reduce child mortality
- Goal 5 Improve maternal health
- Goal 6 Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases
- Goal 7 Ensure environmental sustainability
- Goal 8 Develop a global partnership for development
To monitor progress with implementation of eight MDG are 18 output
targets and 48 key performance indicators. World Bank support for land
reform projects is directly aligned to the MDGs, and especially with MDGs 1,
7 and 8. Indicator 32, which is used to monitor MDG 7 (Ensure environmental
sustainability), specifically refers to tenure security. Perhaps MDG 3
(Promote gender equality and empower women) could be enhanced if there was
an inclusion of an indicator to monitor women’s property rights. Issues such
as poverty reduction, tenure security, pro-poor land management, good
governance, environmental sustainability, gender equality, the rights of
vulnerable groups in society, exploitation of information communication
technology (ICT) are all key issues for land administration and management
programs.
There is no doubt that professional land surveyors and other land-related
professionals can contribute to the MDG. Many such professionals provide
technical support to the World Bank and its development partners. Therefore,
it is very timely that the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) is
proposing to establish a special task force that will bring together
expertise to analyze, explain, and present a FIG response to the MDG
(Enemark, 2006). It is understood that the proposed task force would
endeavor to cooperate with UN agencies, and the World Bank, to develop the
FIG strategy, and to advise the FIG Council on necessary actions. Perhaps
consideration could also be given to a review of FIG’s most pre-eminent
publication “Cadastre 2014” (1998), which pre-dates the MDG.
4. OVERVIEW OF WORLD BANK SUPPORT TO LAND SECTOR
The World Bank has been directly engaged in supporting the land sector
for more than thirty years. This work can be broadly divided into key areas:
(i) support for policy development, (ii) analytical and advisory (AAA)
research; (iii) investment lending to support development and reconstruction
(or lending). Land issues are deeply rooted in countries’ histories and are
often sensitive politically, implying that attempts to address them need to
be solidly grounded in empirical research, often building on carefully
evaluated pilots. The Bank’s strong analytical capacity and intellectual
leadership have allowed operations to draw on cutting edge research to show
the importance of land issues for overall economic development and to help
countries formulate and build consensus around national strategies to deal
with land in a prioritized and well-sequenced manner. In many cases, e.g.
China, Mexico, Ethiopia, India, South Africa, and Brazil, demand for the
Bank’s analytical work is equal or greater than that for Bank lending for
land projects. Strong links to academic and civil society institutions in
client countries and with development partners, continue to allow the Bank
to translate analytical inputs into effective solutions to support
development and reconstruction.
On the lending side, generally, Bank-funded land projects seek to
alleviate poverty and enhance economic growth by improving the security of
land tenure and efficiency of land markets through the development of an
efficient system of land titling and administration that is based on clear
and consistent policies and laws, gender-responsive and supported by an
appropriate institutional structure. Lending projects typically involve: (i)
legal, regulatory and policy reform; (ii) institutional reform; (iii)
systematic land registration (first time titling); (iv) support for
on-demand titling and development of subsequent land transactions; (v) land
valuation; (vi) improved service delivery for land agencies; and (vii)
capacity building for government, private sector and academe (Bell, 2005).
Table 1 displays total World Bank lending for land administration by
fiscal year (FY) and region. It highlights a significant, though regionally
highly uneven, increase in total lending with the total amount of lending
under supervision currently standing at $1.1 billion. Total commitments in
FY01-06 were above $1 billion, compared to $760 million in FY95-00, and only
$172 million before FY95. However, the regional distribution is not uniform,
with two regions, Europe and Central Asia Region (ECA) and Latin America and
Caribbean Region (LAC), making up almost 90% of the size of the portfolio,
followed by East Asia and Pacific Region (EAP), and virtually no lending in
Africa (AFR), South Asia Region (SAR), and Middle East North Africa Region
(MNA). One of the key reasons for such a vast difference is that the
background work needed to underpin land administration projects in the MNA
has really only just started. Given the importance of land policy for a wide
range of situations, plus the Bank’s shift from project- towards
policy-based lending, it is not surprising to find an increasing number of
projects with land policy or administration components.
Table 1: Lending for dedicated land administration
projects (US Million.)
Source: World Bank, Lending Database, 2006
Table 2 illustrates that the number of these interventions amounted to 74
in FY01-06.
Table 2: Number of projects with land
administration component/s
Source: World Bank, Lending Database, 2006
Given the complexity and long-term nature of land-related institutions,
work on land would not be possible without having strong partnerships with a
wide range of development partners, civil society organizations and academic
institutions (Deininger, 2006). The Bank actively contributes to recent
initiatives such as the High Level Commission for Legal Empowerment of the
Poor, the Global Land Tools Network and is in regular contact with the
private sector through institutions such as the International Federation of
Surveyors (FIG) and with non-government organizations such through the
International Land Coalition. The Bank maintains close relationships with
United Nations organizations working in the land sector including Habitat,
the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and United Nations Development
Program (UNDP).
5. LAND POLICY REFORM
Land policy is directly related to the broader concepts of land tenure
and property rights. Land, is perhaps, the “ultimate” resource. It is both a
physical commodity as well as an abstract concept related to the rights to
own or to use it. Land tenure may be seen as an institutional structure that
determines how individuals and groups secure access to the productive
capabilities of the land or other uses over the land. Land management is the
process through which land resources are utilized, while land administration
is more concerned with regulation which addresses issues related to land
information and how they can be utilized for effective and efficient land
management. These institutional structures are comprised of a mixture of
political, economic, legal, and social factors and relationships, each of
which has an impact on land rights and use (Marquardt, 2003).
Land policy reform serves a number of purposes, which may include: (i)
enhancement of security of tenure and providing the basis for determining
mechanisms for the distribution of land rights among citizens; (ii)
promotion of social stability by providing a clear statement of government
goals and objectives toward land; (iii) basis for economic development
because decision making is based on expectations and predictability; (iv)
ensuring sustainable land use and sound land management; and (v) guidance
for the development of legislation, regulations, and institutions to
implement the policy and monitor its impacts
Land policy to support land reform, is a complex, and long-term issue.
There is no absolute template for land policy and every country has its own
unique social, economic, political, environmental, historical, ethnic,
cultural, religious context and idiosyncrasies. What works in one country
may not be suitable and transportable to another country. In post-conflict
countries, tenure security and access to land are major factors in providing
long-term stability. All donors need to be cognizant of local conditions and
issues and work constructively and flexibly.
Deininger (2006) advises that the first and thus far only policy document
on land produced by the World Bank and formally approved by the Bank’s Board
is the 1975 “Land Reform Policy Paper” which by now is quite outdated in
many respects. To respond to demands for guidance by policy-makers and
staff, the Bank produced in 2003 a Policy Research Report (PRR) on ‘Land
Policies for Growth and Poverty Reduction’. This document was prepared in
close collaboration with the Bank’s regional departments and development
partners, and drew on a large body of research. Although the PRR is not a
formal Bank policy document, it has in practice assumed its place and become
a reference document for staff in the Bank and partner institutions. It is
based on four principles, namely: (i) the role of the state in establishing
secure property rights; (ii) the importance of well-functioning land markets
to provide land access; (iii) the social and economic costs of highly
unequal land distribution; (iv) the rationale for focusing regulation on
clear externalities and for having efficient government institutions dealing
with land. The PRR land policy principles are described below:
(i). Security of Property Rights: Land rights are social
conventions that regulate the distribution of the benefits that accrue from
specific uses of a certain piece of land. A number of arguments support
public provision of such rights. First, the high fixed cost of the
institutional infrastructure needed to establish and permanently maintain
land rights favors public provision, or at least regulation. Second, the
benefits of being able to exchange land rights will be realized only in
cases where such rights are standardized, regulated and can be easily and
independently verified. Finally, without central provision, households and
entrepreneurs will be forced to spend resources to defend their claims to
property, for example through guards, fences, etc. which is not only
socially wasteful but also disproportionately disadvantages the poor, who
will be the least able to afford such expenditures (Deininger, 2005).
Security of property rights and the ability to draw on local or national
authorities to ensure these rights, are key to increasing investment
incentives and productivity of land use. A wide range of options to increase
tenure security, from full formal title to legally backed mechanisms at the
community level, can result in higher levels of tenure security and studies
have shown large differences of land values for plots with more secure
tenure. Measures to improve tenure security can also improve the welfare of
the poor. However, in many cases, the land owners will need to pay
comparatively large amounts of “informal” payments to government officials
in order to secure their rights.
Security of tenure is critical in limiting land disputes, and promoting
social stability. Once land rights are obtained, how are those rights
protected? What assurance does the individual have that his/her rights to
land will be protected? Rights over land and property also carry an
obligation to respect the rights of others. Thus, there are social sanctions
over land rights as there are legal sanctions to protect land rights. Where
informal structures no longer function, formal, legal and administrative
structures need to be created to provide this assurance or security of
tenure. Of particular importance are the rights of vulnerable groups in
society such as women and orphans, as is highlighted in the Bank’s support
for property rights in Aceh following the tsunami. Aceh is also important as
it has only since late 2005, achieved peace, after some 30 years of
conflict.
Even though most countries mandate equality of men and women before the
law in principle, the procedures used by land administration institutions
often discriminate against women, explicitly or implicitly. To overcome
this, a pro-active stance in favor of awarding land rights to women by
governments, together with rigorous evaluation of innovative approaches
aiming to accomplish greater gender equality in control of conjugal land on
the ground may be warranted.
(ii). Well-functioning Land Markets: Improving tenure security
will provide direct benefits only to those who have access to land. Making
land rights transferable will not only further increase investment
incentives but also allow the landless to access land through markets.
Furthermore, transferability that is combined with formal title allows using
land as collateral for credit if credit markets are sufficiently developed.
Transferability is particularly important in dynamic environments to bring
about changes in land use and allow households to shift from agriculture to
non-agricultural occupations. Studies show that land rental improves
efficiency and equity in many settings. Land sales markets are often
“thinner” but in many circumstances can enable the poor to gain access to
land.
(iii). Equitable land distribution: Extreme inequality in the land
ownership distribution often goes hand in hand with under-utilization of
vast tracts of productive land and deep-rooted rural poverty. It is in the
state’s interest as well as the private individual’s interest to optimize
the productive use of the land. These uses include agriculture and pastures
as well as the provision of space for housing and commercial and industrial
enterprises. Government policy will help to determine how these production
and investment decisions are made by the state and by private individuals.
For a variety of reasons, markets alone are often unable to bring about the
changes required to attain an optimum structure of production. In this case,
ways to increase access to land by the poor have the potential of increasing
productivity. Also, as land is often intertwined with social exclusion and
acts as a social safety net, increased access to land can also promote
equality of opportunity. However, a large number of failed attempts at land
reform show that doing so effectively is not easy. Different instruments
that can range from land taxation, expropriation with compensation, to
activation of rental markets, may be appropriate. Cost and potential
benefits of such policies need to be carefully compared to that of other
alternatives that may not involve land.
How is access to land allocated among individuals and groups? Are there
mechanisms to ensure equal access or equal opportunities to access? The
former approach would be a more socialistic approach of guaranteeing access
to some land for everyone, but at the possible expense of economies of
scale. Over time, such a guarantee could lead to smaller and smaller parcels
of land as population grows and new people demand access to land. The latter
approach could be seen as a more capitalistic approach that would ensure
access to land for those who have the resources to use the land, but could
be at the expense of those with fewer or no resources. Over time, this could
lead to sizable landless populations that would be problematic if no
alternative forms of employment existed.
(iv). Regulation of Land: Although regulations are warranted where
there are clear externalities, failure to base zoning and regulation
concerning land use on assessment of the capacity needed to implement them,
the cost of doing so, and the way costs and benefits are distributed, has
often given rise to over-regulation which could subsequently degenerate into
a source of rent-seeking. Non-transparent, corrupt, or simply inefficient
land administration undermines the operation of the regulatory system and
public confidence.
Regulation is necessary to support environmental sustainability (Bell
2005). While the land resource of a country is finite and cannot be
expanded, the resource base can be improved upon and it can be degraded. It
is in the country’s interest to have its land resources used in a
sustainable manner to ensure that the land will remain productive into
future generations. Re-forestation and soil conservation programs have long
histories in most countries. However, there has been a great deal of recent
effort in the analysis of environmental impacts on land use practices.
Regulation is also necessary to protect the intrinsic historic and
cultural values of land (Bell 2005). A society’s identity is very much tied
to its history and the land it has settled and defended over time. Most
countries are comprised of ethnically and culturally diverse populations
which collectively create the social fabric of that nation. Policy decisions
can have significant impacts on society at large, ethnic minority groups and
small communities. The different value structures often have an impact of
land access and use.
Another intrinsic value of land is its aesthetic value. The landscape of
a country is a more ambiguous issue, but nonetheless an important
consideration in the development of land policy. Scenic vistas, clean,
free-flowing rivers, and well managed fields and forests give a positive
impression of the country, while denuded, eroded hillsides, urban slums and
polluted lakeshores present the opposite image. Again policy decisions can
have a positive or negative impact on these perceptions (Marquardt, 2003).
6. KEY OUTCOMES OF LAND REFORM PROJECTS
Improving tenure security. Given the fundamental role of secure
land tenure, programs to make land rights more secure have long formed a
major thrust of Bank interventions in this area, accounting for the largest
share of resources spent in the Bank’s land portfolio which currently has
loans amounting to more than $1 billion under supervision. As insecurity of
property rights is often rooted in ambiguous legal situations and complex or
non-transparent institutional arrangements, such programs have included not
only demarcation and issuance of certificates but also legal reform and
institutional restructuring.
Experience has provided a number of lessons:
- Insecure land tenure prevents large parts of the population from
realizing the economic and non-economic benefits such as greater investment
incentives, transferability of land, and improved credit market access, more
sustainable management of resources, and independence from discretionary
interference by bureaucrats, that are normally associated with secure
property rights to land. More than 50 percent of the peri-urban population
in Africa and more than 40 percent in Asia live under informal tenure and
therefore have highly insecure land rights. While no such figures are
available for rural areas, rural land users are reported to make
considerable investments in land as a way to increase tenure security
(Deininger, 2005).
- In many situations legal or institutional reforms will have more
far-reaching effects than issuance of certificates - and also be a
precondition for documentation to be sustainable, as in the Kyrgyz
Republic, Uganda, Cambodia, and Mexico. Such reform, which should take
particular precaution to establish transparent and accountable procedures
include recognition of secondary land rights, and prevent land grabbing by
powerful elites, will thus have to precede or be implemented at least
concurrently with efforts at issuing documents.
- Land administration should have comprehensive coverage, be affordable
given a country’s capacity and prevailing land values, and financially
self-sustaining.
- Pressures for uniformly high accuracy surveying and mapping are
generally unwarranted, especially for low-value rural lands. The focus
should be on the state providing a basic spatial framework, with the
option for higher accuracy surveys in areas where needed.
- Spatial information technology provides very useful tools to support
land administration and management. However, spatial information
technology is no substitute for good governance, transparent and
accountable service delivery, equity and justice. The most significant
challenges faced are still concerned with policy, law and institutional
reform. It is vital that the current ”spatial fad” not cloud the real
challenges that have to be addressed (Bell, 2004).
- Ensuring secure land tenure will be of particular relevance for
vulnerable groups who were traditionally discriminated against. Attention
to women’s rights will be warranted where women are the main cultivators,
where out-migration is high or control of productive activities is
differentiated by gender, or where adult mortality and unclear inheritance
regulations undermine women’s livelihood if their husband dies, as in
Africa with HIV/AIDS.
Strengthening Land Rental Markets. Deininger (2005) advises that
the Bank has long argued that, in order to realize the full benefits that
can accrue from rental markets, governments need to ensure that tenure
security is high enough to facilitate long-term contracts, and eliminate
unjustified restrictions on the operation of such markets. Limitations on
the operation of land sales markets may, in some cases, be justified on
theoretical grounds but extremely few situations where certain types of land
rental may need to be circumscribed. In practice, efforts to implement land
market restrictions have almost invariably weakened property rights and
their unintended negative consequences have far outweighed the positive
impacts they were intended to achieve. Therefore, there is a strong case for
eliminating restrictions on rental markets where they continue to exist.
Also, with few exceptions, e.g. (temporary) caps on speculative land
acquisition in the case of rapid structural change little can be said in
favor of sales market restrictions as a policy tool.
Land reform: Land reform has had varying degrees of success in
achieving greater efficiency and empowering the poor (Deininger, 2006).
While land reforms have achieved considerable success in some Asian
countries such as Japan, Korea and Taiwan, land reforms in Latin America
have often been less successful. One reason for limited impact was that
reforms were often guided by short-term political objectives, and that an
“agrarian” emphasis on full-time farming increased their cost (while
reducing the number of potential beneficiaries- and the reforms’ impact on
poverty. To ensure success, respect for existing property rights, access to
non-land assets, working capital, output and credit markets for
beneficiaries and a conducive policy environment are essential. Beneficiary
selection should be transparent and participatory, and attention needs to be
paid to the fiscal viability of land reform efforts. The Bank is exploring
ways to use market-based mechanisms to transfer land to poor beneficiaries
and to dealing with the legacy of aborted or only partially successful land
reforms, e.g. by eliminating overlapping property rights, in a number of
countries such as Brazil and South Africa.
Strengthening land administration capacity: Most Bank-funded
projects have given particular emphasis to capacity building in the
government institutions responsible for the public administration of land.
Often it is not just the lack of capacity in land administration which has
been the challenge, but also lack of capacity in public administration
generally. In addition, weak private sector capacity means that the
government must provide a greater range of services. Developing private
sector capacity in land administration and management should be viewed in a
broader context than just land surveying and may include other service
delivery areas including planning, ITC, valuation, law, conveyancing and
property sales.
The Bank realizes that one reason for the land administration system to
perform less than satisfactorily is unjustified government monopolies (e.g.
in surveying) that may promote ”rent seeking” and decrease the quality of
service provision. It does so in a project context and through participation
in international networks that promote use of modern technology to establish
low-cost and transparent land administration tools. It also supports gradual
devolution of responsibility for land use regulation and taxation to local
governments which, if coupled with capacity building, could make a
contribution to efforts towards more effective decentralization.
Dealing with Land Conflict: Increasing scarcity of land in the
presence of high rates of population growth, possibly along with a legacy of
discrimination and highly inequitable land access, implies that many
historical and contemporary conflicts have their roots in struggles over
land. This suggests a special role for land policy in many post-conflict
settings. An ability to deal with land claims by women and refugees, to use
land as part of a strategy to provide economic opportunities to demobilized
soldiers, and to resolve conflicts and overlapping claims to land in a
legitimate manner, will greatly increase the scope for post conflict
reconciliation and speedy recovery of the productive sector, a key for
subsequent economic growth. Failure to put in place the necessary mechanisms
may keep conflicts simmering, either openly or under the surface, with high
social and economic costs especially because, as time goes by subsequent
transactions will lead to a multiplication of the number of conflicts which
can result in generalized insecurity of land tenure (Deininger, 2005).
8. GOOD GOVERNANCE
Throughout the world, land-related development cooperation is giving
sufficient attention to integrating governance principles and safeguards
into the design, implementation and impact monitoring of land administration
and management projects. Although secure tenure and access to land have been
universally accepted as the base for economic and social development, recent
privatization of land, liberalization of land markets, and increasing demand
and competition for land, have in many developing countries led to
insecurity, betterment of the rich, and deprivation of the poor. A primary
cause of this is weak governance in land administration. Deininger (2005)
notes that if institutions are weak, this can be a ”hot-spot of red tape and
corruption”, as in the case of India where a recent study estimated annual
bribes paid in the land sector at a staggering US $700 million.
While technical solutions for supporting land administration are
generally accessible, affordable and appropriate, the problems caused by
corruption, the general lack of law and order, and poor public sector
management have become recognized as the key barriers to land administration
reform, development of formal land markets, public confidence and
investment. Good governance in land administration aims to protect property
rights of individuals as well as of the state by introducing principles such
as transparency, accountability, rule of law, equity, participation and
effectiveness into land related public sector management.
The public administration of land, including the management of state
lands, has a high potential for abuse. In many countries, corruption and
abuse of power have resulted in the undermining of tenure security. As a
consequence this has adversely impacted the business climate and economic
activities due to increased costs of doing business, lack of confidence of
the private sector, and under-utilization of land. At the same time, high
costs and inefficient prolonged procedures due to corrupted land
registration systems discourage people to register their land, and operate
within the informal land market sectors. This also impacts land tax revenue,
and reduces government spending on the provision of public services and
infrastructure.
9. CASE STUDY: RESPONDING TO DISASTERS AND CONFLICT IN ACEH
Responding to the land issues in Aceh (Indonesia) has been especially
challenging given the disasterous tsunami and earthquakes, as well as the
long-running civil war.
On December 26, 2004, a 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck 150 kilometers
off the coast of Aceh, on the island of Sumatra in Indonesia. Forty-five
minutes later, a tsunami wave hit Aceh, and with minutes it swept clean an
800 kilometer coastal strip of Aceh. This is equivalent to the coastline
from San Francisco to San Diego. A reported 130,000 people were killed and
37,000 remain missing. The actual toll could be as high as 170,000. Up to
500,000 people were made homeless. On March 28, 2006, a major earthquake
added to the toll in Nias (an island off North Sumatra), Simuleu (island off
Aceh) and southern parts of Aceh. The December 2005 earthquake caused the
2,000 sq. km. Island of Simuleu with its 78,000 inhabitants, to sink about
one meter, while the March 2006 earthquake caused it to rise two meters, or
even more in some locations. In addition to the huge loss of human life,
these events caused immense social, economic and environmental devastation
to areas that were already impoverished and reeling from almost 30 years of
armed conflict.
The tsunami appeared to bring an ”informal” truce to the 30-year
conflict. However, incidents continued. For example, during the first month
following the tsunami, the Indonesia government reported (January 24, 2006)
that 200 insurgents had been killed. On August 15, 2005, the Government of
Indonesia and the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) signed a peace accord in
Helsinki, intended to end the three decades of armed conflict, which had
resulted in 15,000 deaths of civilians, separatist insurgents and soldiers.
The peace agreement, which continues to hold, has been described as the
silver lining in the dark clouds of the tsunami and earthquake disasters
(BRR, 2005). The de-mobilization of former GAM soldiers has created a number
of land-related challenges, including the provision of land for farming to
provide livelihoods for former GAM soldiers and also the controlling of
illegal logging by unemployed former GAM soldiers.
The reconstruction of Aceh and Nias is estimated to require at least
US$5.8 billion to restore lost assets. This includes taking into account
rising inflation due to high demand for reconstruction related goods. One
year after the tsunami, US$4.4 billion, from the international community,
had already been allocated for specific reconstruction projects. The Bureau
of Reconstruction and Rehabilitation (or Badan Rehabilitasi dan Rekonstruksi
–BRR) has adopted the theme of “build back better”. Progress is being made,
though it will take many years to achieve sustainability. The reconstruction
of Aceh sees the majority of MDG being directly addressed. The Multi-Donor
Fund (2006), which is jointly chaired by the World Bank, BRR and Ambassador
of the European Commission, reports on funding a portfolio of 16 projects,
mobilizing US$392 million to support: (i) recovery of communities; (ii)
infrastructure and transport; (iii) sustainable management of the
environment; and (iv) capacity building and governance.
The tsunami and earthquakes caused significant damage or destruction to
property on extensive tracts of land. While some of the land can be
rehabilitated, in many areas the land became permanently submerged or was
washed away into the sea. Many land parcels will never be habitable or
productive again, requiring relocation of surviving owners and families.
Much farm land was washed away or damaged by salt water. Even where
communities can re-build on original locations, many households need to move
to facilitate improved community spatial plans that provide wider roads,
facilities and escape routes. Significant losses were sustained by the land
administration system, as summarized in Table 3.
Table 3: Damage to property Rights and the Land
Administration System in Aceh and Nias
The implementation framework for the reconstruction of property rights
adopted by the government is provided under the Reconstruction of Aceh Land
Administration (RALAS) Project, being implemented under the direction of the
National Land Agency (Badan Pertanahan Nasional – BPN), and funded by a
three-year, $28.5 million multi-donor grant through the World Bank. The
broad goal of the project is to improve land tenure security in Aceh with
specific objectives to: (i) recover and protect ownership land rights of the
people in the affected and surrounding areas; and (ii) rebuild the land
administration system
RALAS aims to ensure that community-led processes are conducted to a
standard that will have a strong-legal basis for future titling by
landowners. Key land challenges facing the reconstruction of Aceh include:
(i) complex Indonesian laws and Syariah law; (ii) land speculation; (iii)
evictions from land; (iv) protection of the rights of widows and orphans;
(v) land requirements for demobilized GAM soldiers; (vi) relocation of
communities whose land was submerged or became uninhabitable; (vii) land
consolidation, re-allocation and spatial planning; and (viii) good
governance.
The protection of land and property rights is seen as fundamental for
long-term reconstruction efforts and peace, as well as advancing the social,
economic and cultural rights of the people (BRR, 2005). Implementation of
RALAS, and its linkages with the broader reconstruction program,
demonstrates the particular unique, complexities experienced by land
administration and management in addressing the MDG.
10. CONCLUSION
Land administration and management reforms are complex and long-term.
Measures to increase land tenure security, reduce the transaction costs of
transferring land rights, establish an appropriate regulatory framework and
prevent undesirable externalities, usually cut traditional institutional
boundaries. It is essential to have a long-term vision and to include land
policy issues in the overall framework of a broadly based development
strategy that addresses the wider social, economic and environmental agenda.
The extent to which objectives are achieved should be independently
monitored, and jointly with other government programs aimed at poverty
reduction and economic development. Land policy has a special role for many
post-conflict settings in providing a stable foundation and maintaining the
peace. Land reform has an integral role in meeting the challenges of the
MDG.
REFERENCES
- Badan Rehabilitasi dan Rekonstruksi (BRR), 2005, “Aceh and Nias One
Year Alter the Tsunami: The Recovery Effort and Way Forward”, Joint Report
of the BRR and International Development Partners, December 2005.
- Benny, 2005, “Reconstruction of Land Administration System in Aceh and
Nias”, FIG EGM, Bangkok Dec 8-9, 2005.
- Bell, K.C., 2004, “Developing Asia and the Pacific: World Bank
Financed Land Projects”, Third Regional FIG Conference for Asia and the
Pacific, Jakarta, October 3-7, 2003.
- Bell, K.C., 2005, ”Land Administration and Management: The Need for
Innovative Approaches to Land Policy and Tenure Security”, FIG EGM,
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the UN Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery”, New York City, July 14, 2005.
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Multi Donor Fund Results, Challenges and Opportunities, Progress Report
II, June 2006.
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United Nations Millennium Declaration”, Report of the Secretary General.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The author is indebted to the guidance and inputs by Klaus Deininger and
the World Bank’s Land Thematic Group, in the preparation of this paper.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Keith C. Bell joined the World Bank in 2003, after a distinguished
career in both the public sector and the Army in Australia, culminating as
the Surveyor-General of Victoria, 1999-2003. Prior to this he held a range
of senior positions including: General Manager in Planning and Land
Management of the Australian Capital Territory Government 1997-1999;
Executive Officer (and Secretary) of the Australian New Zealand Land
Information Council (ANZLIC); and Director of the National Land Data Center
in the Australian Government. His early career saw him work in the
exploration industry, hydrography and private sector land development.
Within the World Bank, he has responsibility for supporting land
administration projects throughout the East Asia Region, and works in
Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao Peoples Democratic Republic, Philippines and
Vietnam. In early 2005, he commenced leading efforts to deal with land and
property rights in Aceh and North Sumatra following the tsunami disaster. He
has only recently returned to Bank headquarters. He is a licensed surveyor
and engineer, and has higher degrees in science, human resource management
and business administration. He is a Fellow of several professional
institutions including: (i) the Institution of Engineers, Australia; (ii)
the Institution of Surveyors, Australia; (iii) Australian Institute of
Company Directors; and (iv) the Australian Institute of Management. He is
also a Member of the American Society of Civil Engineers. In 2003, he was
awarded a Doctor of Applied Science (Honoris Causa) from the Royal Melbourne
Institute of Technology (RMIT) University. He has also received a number of
military decorations and awards.
CONTACTS
Keith C. Bell
The World Bank, East Asia Pacific Region
1818 H Street, NW
Washington D.C., USA
Tel. + 1 202 458 1889
Fax + 1 202 477 2733
Email: [email protected]
Web site: www.worldbank.org
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