Christoph Kubitza / Vijesh V. Krishna / Stephan Klasen / Thomas Kopp / Nunung Nuryartono / Matin Qaim

Labor Displacement in Agriculture: Evidence from Oil Palm Expansion in Indonesia

Land Economics | 2024


  • Abstract

    We analyze the labor market effects of oil palm cultivation among smallholder farmers in Indonesia. Oil palm requires less labor per unit of land than alternative crops, especially less female labor. Micro-level data and nationally-representative regency-level data show that oil palm adoption, on average, led to an expansion of total cropland at the expense of forestland, resulting in higher agricultural labor demand for men. At the same time, women’s employment rates declined due to a substantial decrease in agricultural family labor, which was most evident in regions with high initial land scarcity and thus limited options for cropland expansion.

    Journal

    Land Economics

    Volume

    100

    Number

    3

    Pages

    547-567


    Vijesh V. Krishna

    Vijesh V. Krishna


    Prof. Dr. Stephan Klasen

    Prof. Dr. Stephan Klasen


    Thomas Kopp

    Thomas Kopp


    Dr. Nunung Nuryartono

    Dr. Nunung Nuryartono

    IPB University


    Prof. Dr. Matin Qaim

    Prof. Dr. Matin Qaim

    University of Göttingen


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