Aec 502 Summary
Aec 502 Summary
Aec 502 Summary
PROF OLADEEBO
Land resource economics may be described simply as the field of study that deals with
man's economic relationship with others with respect to land. It is concerned with the allocation
and use of scarce resources.
Land resource economics is often characterized by its practical, institutional and problem
solving approach. It uses concepts and working tools from many and varied disciplines such as
Law, Political Science, Geography, Psychology, Sociology, Architecture, Estate management
etc. (Take note)
Basic Concepts in Land Resource Economics
The four basic Concepts are:
1. The economic concept of land and land resources
2. The classification of land uses by type
3. The concept of land use capacity
4. The concept of highest and best use
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3. Crop land
4. Pasture and grazing land
5. Forest land
6. Mineral land
7. Recreational land
8. Transportation land
9. Service areas e.g barracks, cemetery
10. Barren and waste land
Concepts of Land
Land means many things to many people depending upon the concept, interest at the
moment, the context in which it is used and the circumstances under which it is considered.
Land as space: in this view, land is thought as room and surface with which and upon
which the life takes place. Land is fixed in quantity and indestructible because space
cannot be destroyed or increased.
Land as a nature: in this sense, land is conditioned by its access to sunlight, rainfall,
wind, changing climatic conditions, soil and topographic conditions. Due to this, some
areas are rich in soil, forest and other resources while others are barren and bleak.
Land as a factor of production: it is considered alongside other factors of production
(labour, capital, management). Land is seen as a nature-given source of food, minerals,
building materials, fibre and other raw materials used in modern societies. (Take note)
Land as consumption good: land is often held and coveted because it adds value as a
consumer good on its own right.
Land as situation: this involves location with respect to markets, geographic features,
other resources and other countries. It is significant because the value and use of most
land is likely determined by its location and accessibility, strategic importance of location
factor in modern economic affairs and world politics. E.g Comparing a Land in Lekki,
Lagos State to a land in Odo-Oba, Oyo State. (Take note)
Land as a property: it involves real estate and has legal connotations. It is concerned
with areas where rights of ownership are exercised and use with the nature of rights and
responsibilities held on land.
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Land as a capital: in this concept, from the standpoint of the investor, land must be
purchased or leased like other capital goods.
SUPPLY OF LAND
Physical supply: is concerned with the existence of land resources i.e physical land must
be available.
Economic supply: is concerned only with the portion of physical supply that man uses. It
is greatly affected by price and demand factors.
Factors Affecting Economic Supply of Land
Natural Physical Characteristics: this relates with sunlight and temperature,
precipitation and access to water supply, topography and drainage, soil conditions and
presence of minerals, physical locations (markets and transportation).
Economic Factors: it becomes economically significant whenever people begin to use
land, compete with others for use/control, put a price or value on land or assume the cost
associated with their development.
Institutional Determinants of Land Use: the factors involved are culture and custom,
government law, public opinion, and concept of property right. (Take Note)
Culture: in the Yoruba setting, every male child has right to be given land unlike in
Ghana where it is female.
Government law: Government is the owner of the land
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Public opinion: stimulates interest in environmental quality and public acquisition of
recreation areas.
Property rights: you cannot improve a land if you do not have the right over it as the
owner.
Technological Factors: they affect by pointing the way to the fuller and more extended
use of existing supplies and by facilitating the discovery development of new source of
supply.
DR AKINNIRAN
PROPERTY RIGHTS IN LAND RESOURCES
Property rights tend to influence incentives and the behaviours
Property right assignments affect the allocation of resources, composition of output and
distribution of income
Property right differs from free goods in the sense that it involves only appropriate
objects of value over which man can and does exert possession
Property right until there is both an owner to possess and use the property object in
question and other interested persons who can be excluded from possession and use
Property right come into existence only when two or more people compete for the
possession and use of some objects and need develops for the allocation of rights between
them.
Property does not exist when there is no population and no outside claimants.
Two of the most important attributes of property objectives are:
a. Appropriability
b. Value
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Overall responsibility society has for maximizing social returns both now and in the
future
Properties are always subject to social control and some of these are informal in form of
customs, traditions, religions, restraints and public opinion.
FORMAL CONTROLS: are in form of sovereign power which interprets and implement the
will of society.
Five Important Formal Powers exercised by Government
1. Police power
2. Eminent domain (Powers of control over landed property)
3. Taxation power
4. Spending power
5. Proprietary power (Auxiliary powers to achieve particular objective)
Police Power: is the power of government to limit personal liberties and personal rights in the
interest of public health, safety, morals and general welfare.
Eminent Domain: enables government to appropriate private properties for public uses without
the owner’s consent as long as long as the property is taken under due law process with just
payment of just compensation.
Taxation: most taxes are levied to collect revenue. It can be used to force the redistribution of
DR EZEKIEL
LAND TENURE SYSTEM
Land tenure is a concept which involves many relationships established among men that
determines either varying rights to control, occupy and use landed properties. It concerns all of
the ways in which people, corporate bodies and government share in the bundle of rights and it
concerns the time period during which these rights are held.
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Tenure: means the holding of property especially real estate or by reference to a superior
inherent in the world ‘held’ is the idea of exclusion that is to set aside and keep as one’s own by
shifting out and excluding others.
In the North, the law has been codified into a book called 1962 land tenure law.
In the south a customary land tenure system is used where individual is given land by the
head of the community e.g Chief, Oba, etc. The implication of this is that land will be
redistributed and you will not be allowed to alienate the land from the community.
In the East, they have Compound land/farm, Near and Far Farm. Compound land is not
redistributed. Near and far farms are periodically shared among members and no member
is allowed to grow permanent crops on the land as it also shared according to seniority.
The implication of this is that if land is shared and there's rotation, it may take 15 years
before it return the land originally to be given you initially.
Problems Arising From Customary Land Tenure Systems
Problem of Tenants: the tenants do not have secure access to land that is they have no
security of expectation.
Inalienability or refusal to sell: family land is not subject to sale. The reason is that
there is multiplicity of interest on a piece of land. The law says that the sale of land by
individual member without family members consent is void.
Fragmentation of land into uneconomic sized tracts: this is due to the rule of
inheritance which says every male must share from the land.
Land Reform: is a means of bringing about structural change in the agricultural sectors there by
altering the size distribution of holdings or distribution of income.
Forms/Types of Land Reforms
i. Redistribution of public or private land in other to change the pattern of land distribution
and size of holdings
ii. Consolidation of individual holdings
iii. Changes in land ownership and tenancy right with or without physical redistributing of
land
iv. Change in condition of tenure without changing ownership or redistributing land tenancy
reform
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LAND USE DECREE NO.6, 1978
It was promulgated in March, 1978 and its purpose was to socialize land ownership
It divides the country into rural and urban areas
Urban areas is controlled by the Governor and Rural areas is controlled by the Local
Government
Land Use and allocation in Urban and Rural Areas according to land use Decree no. 6 of ,
1978
Urban Areas Rural Areas
Statutory certificate of occupancy Customary certificate of occupancy
Land use and allocation committee advices the Land use advisory committee advices Local
Governor Government Chairman
Governor can allocate a limit of 2000ha to a Local Government can grant a maximum of
person. 500ha for agricultural use
Each individual can keep half an hectare of Using the land for agricultural purpose doesn't
undeveloped land need application for customary certificate
except using the land as collateral and you
apply for certificate of occupancy
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4. The payment of compensation has always been untimely
5. Shortage of funds is another major problem as there is a general problem of cash flow in
the economy.
Von Thunen's Model of Spatial Location
This model is concerned primarily to the role that transportation costs play in allocating
the land resources found at varying distance from market between different agricultural uses.
The Assumptions of the model are:
1. Rational behaviour
2. Isolated State
3. Uniformity fertility and climate
4. A village type of settlement
5. Uniform topography
6. Relatively primitive transportation facilities.
Conservation of Land
This means the preservation in unimpaired efficiency of the resources of the earth or in a
condition so nearly unimpaired as the nature of the case or wise exhaustion will permit. Land
resources conservation doesn't mean non uses it is concerned with the need for orderly and
efficient resource use.
Classification of Land Resources
Fund or stock resource
Flow resource
Composite resources (has characteristics of fund and flow).
Conservation depends on
The expected benefits, duration of the planning period, quantum of investment, operators ability
to choose, impact on other resources.
Measures to promote conservation
Enforced conservation: by zoning and conservation district (irrigation, flood, wind and water
control)
Conservation education: Education on problems, solutions and opportunities, and to create
conservation habit.
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Economic measures: loan at reduced rate, subsidies, lease provision on long term basis.
MR ADELALU
LAND RENT AS ECONOMIC SURPLUS
MVP
L
AVC
Cost & Return
MFC=AFC
S
MR=AR
L
M
Cost &
Return
Return
Cost &
Return
AC
Production cost
Production cost
Land Rent
MC
AC
Cost &
Return
Production cost
Unit of output
Grade C Land
Land
Rent
Cost of
Production
No net margin
The ability of a land to yield highest possible return to the owner is called Land Use Capacity.
Places with highest use capacity have the highest values, production and land rent.
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Significance of Land Rent
i. Its relationship to contract rental arrangements
ii. To property values
iii. To land resource investments and development decision
iv. To the allocation of land resources between different types of uses
IRRIGATION
Irrigation can be defined as a practical application of water on a given area of land. It is
also the application of water to a specific area of land to supplement insufficient rainfall.
History of Irrigation: modern artificial irrigation began on a large scale in the 18th century by
the pioneer work of British engineers in India. Year 1800-1852 was considered the golden age of
irrigation when the work of Sir Col. Cotton and Col. Author was noticeable and traceable to the
irrigation work in India. Statistics show that the area irrigated in the world rode from 1800sqkm
in 1901 to 1856sqkm in the year 1954.
Prospect of Irrigation
Improved agricultural production
Agro-based and allied industries to process increased output
Employment opportunities
Availability of water based recreational facilities
The prestige associated may reverse the flow of rural-urban irrigation
Problems of Irrigation
Physical, Environmental, Technical, Economic, Social, Institutional and Legal problems.
Methods of Irrigation
Surface Irrigation: includes flood, basin, corrugation,
Overhead Irrigation: includes sprinkler, drip
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Scope of Irrigation (Available resources)
Human resources: Nigeria has an estimated population of about 200 million which grows at the
rate of 2.5% per annum.
Land Resources: Land of Nigeria is 91.07 million hectares, 72.5% is arable, 1.4 million is
irrigable and 0.05% of irrigable land is under irrigation.
Water Resources: Surface water (rivers, stream etc) = 193 billion cubic metres of water. Niger
and Benue at Lokoja have 157 million m³, Lake Chad has 33 million while domestic needs of
water only amounts to 4.8 billion m³ per year.
Studies Needed
Need to control health hazards associated with irrigation
Need to construct canal system by the federal government of Nigeria to aid practical
irrigation
Need to train and retrain wall personnel involved in the process of irrigation
Need to find or provide solution for the problem of erosion associated to irrigation
process
Need by federal ministry of agriculture to provide necessary fund to finance for practical
irrigation system
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