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Keywords = government–farmer cooperation mechanism

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22 pages, 2017 KiB  
Article
An Evolutionary Game Analysis of Carbon Trading Mechanisms for Governments, Farmer Professional Cooperatives and Farmers
by Qianqian Chu, Haoyang Li, Nicola Cannon, Xianmin Chang and Jian Feng
Systems 2025, 13(6), 413; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13060413 - 27 May 2025
Viewed by 387
Abstract
Farmer professional cooperatives are the focus objects of agricultural carbon emission reduction; with the use of the advantages of scale economy and technology, one can promote the development of low-carbon agriculture. In order to study the influencing factors of agricultural carbon emission reduction [...] Read more.
Farmer professional cooperatives are the focus objects of agricultural carbon emission reduction; with the use of the advantages of scale economy and technology, one can promote the development of low-carbon agriculture. In order to study the influencing factors of agricultural carbon emission reduction on farmer professional cooperatives, we explore the interaction effects of carbon emission reduction behavior between farmer professional cooperatives and farmers under government interventions. This paper introduces a carbon transaction mechanism as well as reward and punishment polices into a tripartite evolutionary game model between farmer professional cooperatives, governments, and farmers. Based on the model, we identify a stable evolution strategy and perform simulation analysis. The results indicate that the carbon transaction mechanism can effectively suppress the negative effect of increased costs through higher revenues of the carbon transaction, and carbon prices above 60 CNY/ton enable cooperatives to reduce regional emissions. Higher revenues can promote positive carbon emission reduction behaviors of farmer professional cooperatives and farmers. The sharing ratio increases from 20% to 80%, and farmers gain additional benefits by cooperating in the farmer professional cooperative practices to reduce emissions. Rational regulation of carbon transaction price and quota can promote the participation of farmer professional cooperatives in carbon emission reduction practices and promote the farmers’ inclusion into farmer professional cooperatives. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Systems Practice in Social Science)
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28 pages, 2951 KiB  
Article
Coupling Agricultural Carbon Emission Efficiency and Economic Growth: Evidence from Jiangxi Province, China
by Lulu Yang, Xieqihua Liu, Xiaolan Kang, Yuxia Zhu, Chaobao Wu, Bin Liu and Wen Li
Sustainability 2025, 17(9), 4246; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17094246 - 7 May 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 560
Abstract
Exploring the law and evolution mechanism of coupling and coordination between agricultural carbon emission efficiency (ACE) and agricultural economic growth (AEG) can provide a reference basis for agricultural low-carbon transformation. This study takes 11 cities in Jiangxi Province as the research object; measures [...] Read more.
Exploring the law and evolution mechanism of coupling and coordination between agricultural carbon emission efficiency (ACE) and agricultural economic growth (AEG) can provide a reference basis for agricultural low-carbon transformation. This study takes 11 cities in Jiangxi Province as the research object; measures the level of ACE based on the panel data from 2008 to 2022; and analyzes the development and influencing factors of the coupling and coordination between ACE and AEG by using the coupling coordination degree model, the Dagum Gini coefficient decomposition method, and the Tobit regression model. The results reveal the following: (1) The overall ACE in Jiangxi Province displays a significant upward trend, with the average efficiency value increasing from 0.172 to 0.624, reflecting an average annual growth rate of 72.43%. Nonetheless, there remains clear regional heterogeneity, characterized by lower efficiencies in Central and Southern Jiangxi compared to the higher efficiencies found in Northern and Western Jiangxi. (2) Despite gradual improvements in regional coordination, the Central and Southern Jiangxi regions still lag Northern and Western Jiangxi in terms of the linked coordination between ACE and AEG, symptoms of which had been previously misaligned. (3) The results of Dagum’s Gini coefficient decomposition show that inter-regional disparities are the main source of overall disparities, with a contribution of 37.43%, which is higher than the synergistic effect of intra-regional disparities and hyper-variable densities, corroborating the core contradiction of uneven development across regions. (4) The Tobit model reveals that government investment, industrial structure optimization, urbanization, and educational attainment exert a significant positive influence on promoting coupling coordination. To establish a scientific basis for achieving a low-carbon agricultural transformation and equitable AEG in Jiangxi Province, this research recommends bolstering regional cooperation, fostering innovations in agricultural science and technology, optimizing the industrial structure, and enhancing farmers’ awareness of low-carbon practices. This study expands the theoretical system of agricultural low-carbon transition in terms of research methods and scales to provide a scientific basis for agricultural provinces to realize agricultural low-carbon transition and balanced economic development. Full article
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17 pages, 634 KiB  
Article
Strategies for Coordinated Development Between Local Communities and the Northeast China Tiger and Leopard National Park: Case Study of the Hunchun Area
by Ruiyuan Zhou, Yuchen Du, Yang Gao and Yi Xie
Diversity 2025, 17(5), 336; https://doi.org/10.3390/d17050336 - 6 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 474
Abstract
As an important component of China’s conservation strategy, the Northeast China Tiger and Leopard National Park faces conflicts between environmental protection and community development. Taking the Hunchun area as a case study, here a choice experiment is employed to construct a policy-scenario model [...] Read more.
As an important component of China’s conservation strategy, the Northeast China Tiger and Leopard National Park faces conflicts between environmental protection and community development. Taking the Hunchun area as a case study, here a choice experiment is employed to construct a policy-scenario model encompassing participation mechanisms, benefit-sharing models, and industrial development. Our analysis of farmers’ heterogeneous policy preferences reveals the following. (1) Farmers significantly prefer cooperative organization participation, ecological industry, and ecological compensation while showing less acceptance of agricultural deep processing. (2) Heterogeneity analysis indicates that middle-aged, educated, and low-income male farmers have stronger preferences for policy optimization. (3) Existing homogeneous policies do not satisfy diversified stakeholder demands. We propose a governance framework integrating ecology, industry, and institutions, suggesting practical pathways such as optimizing interest distribution mechanisms, innovating green industry models, and establishing cross-regional ecological compensation mechanisms. This study provides theoretical and practical support for reconciling conservation and development in protected areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Conflict and Coexistence Between Humans and Wildlife)
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23 pages, 664 KiB  
Article
The Role of Agricultural Socialized Services in Unlocking Agricultural Productivity in China: A Spatial and Threshold Analysis
by Yu Bai, Yuheng Wei, Ruofan Liao and Jianxu Liu
Agriculture 2025, 15(9), 957; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15090957 - 28 Apr 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 734
Abstract
Amid global economic transformation, a persistent productivity gap exists between developed and developing nations in agriculture sector, shaped by technological advancements and shifting resource allocation patterns. Agricultural socialized services (ASS), defined as organized systems providing technical support, mechanization assistance, information services, market linkages, [...] Read more.
Amid global economic transformation, a persistent productivity gap exists between developed and developing nations in agriculture sector, shaped by technological advancements and shifting resource allocation patterns. Agricultural socialized services (ASS), defined as organized systems providing technical support, mechanization assistance, information services, market linkages, and resource optimization to farmers, have emerged as critical mechanisms for agricultural development. In developing economies, these services catalyze gains in agricultural labor productivity through the integration of advanced technologies and the mechanization of farming practices. Using panel data from 30 Chinese provinces during 2011 to 2022, this study investigates the relationship between ASS and ALP, focusing on regional heterogeneity, threshold effects, and spatial spillovers. The combination of spatial econometric methods and threshold analysis was selected for its unique capacity to capture both the geographic interdependencies and nonlinear relationships that characterize agricultural development processes. These thresholds at 5.254 and 8.478 represent critical points where the impact of ASS on ALP significantly changes in magnitude, revealing a nonlinear relationship that evolves across different stages of agricultural development. The study highlights notable regional disparities in the impact of ASS. Specifically, ASS is more effective on ALP in eastern, central and key food-producing regions, while its impact is relatively weak in western and non-food-producing regions. Spatial spillover analysis indicates that advancements in ASS create positive externalities, extending beyond their immediate implementation zones and facilitating inter-provincial agricultural cooperation and development. These findings provide crucial guidance for policymakers and agricultural service providers to optimize resource allocation and service delivery strategies. By identifying critical development thresholds and regional variations, this research offers evidence-based support for government officials designing targeted agricultural policies and enterprises developing region-specific service models to foster sustainable agricultural growth across diverse regional landscapes. Full article
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21 pages, 1427 KiB  
Article
Organizational Support, Knowledge Distance, and the Agricultural Ecological Efficiency of Smallholders: Comparing Government and Market Drivers
by Yingyu Zhu and Huilan Piao
Agriculture 2025, 15(9), 932; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15090932 - 24 Apr 2025
Viewed by 401
Abstract
The support of external organizational forces is essential for the promotion of agricultural ecological efficiency to improve agricultural green development and boost China’s prosperity in agriculture. To identify the different impact of different organizational support on improving farmers’ agricultural ecological efficiency and investigate [...] Read more.
The support of external organizational forces is essential for the promotion of agricultural ecological efficiency to improve agricultural green development and boost China’s prosperity in agriculture. To identify the different impact of different organizational support on improving farmers’ agricultural ecological efficiency and investigate the mechanism by which organizational support affects agricultural ecological efficiency, this study explores the internal logic of farmers’ promotion of agricultural ecological efficiency and empirically examines the impact of organizational support and knowledge distance on agricultural ecological efficiency using 1011 household-level survey data from Henan province in China. The study shows the following: (1) Enhancing organizational support can significantly promote agricultural ecological efficiency, and the effect of organizational support in descending order is agricultural material distributors, peasant cooperatives, village committees, agricultural technology service centers, and agricultural associations. (2) Knowledge distance partially mediates the influence of organizational support on agricultural ecological efficiency. The mediating mechanism of spatial distance is the most significant, followed by content distance and cognitive distance. (3) Market-oriented organizations play a stronger role in incremental support, and government organizations play a stronger role in radical support. This study adds considerable value to the empirical literature and provides precise guidance for improving agricultural ecological efficiency. Full article
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27 pages, 2402 KiB  
Article
Ensuring Housing Security Through Farmer Apartments: A Social–Ecological System Framework Analysis of Operational Mechanisms in L Village
by Zhaojun Liu and Xinying Li
Sustainability 2025, 17(8), 3722; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17083722 - 20 Apr 2025
Viewed by 420
Abstract
This study employs the social–ecological system (SES) framework to investigate the operational mechanisms of farmer apartment housing in Village L, demonstrating how such mechanisms ensure housing security for villagers in land-constrained contexts. Through a case analysis of Village L, we reveal that the [...] Read more.
This study employs the social–ecological system (SES) framework to investigate the operational mechanisms of farmer apartment housing in Village L, demonstrating how such mechanisms ensure housing security for villagers in land-constrained contexts. Through a case analysis of Village L, we reveal that the effective implementation of farmer apartments relies on four interconnected elements: socio-political and economic conditions, homestead resource allocation within the resource system, institutional governance rules, and collaborative interactions among the government, village collectives, villagers, and enterprises. By integrating fragmented resources, optimizing participatory governance, and fostering multi-stakeholder cooperation, Village L has established a closed-loop operational model of “resource intensification–democratic decision-making–synergistic co-construction”. This model preserves villagers’ homestead entitlements and addresses housing demands through centralized construction, striking a balance between equity and efficiency in land-scarce areas. The findings underscore that farmer apartment housing represents a viable pathway for achieving “housing-for-all” in resource-limited areas, contingent upon institutionalizing village collectives’ self-governance capabilities and incentivizing broader societal participation (e.g., NGOs and enterprises) to form a diversified investment framework. Policy refinements should prioritize scaling context-specific governance innovations while safeguarding farmers’ land rights during urbanization transitions, offering replicable insights for regions facing similar land use challenges. Full article
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31 pages, 1060 KiB  
Review
The Adoption and Scaling of Climate-Smart Agriculture Innovation by Smallholder Farmers in South Africa: A Review of Institutional Mechanisms, Policy Frameworks and Market Dynamics
by Mary Funke Olabanji and Munyaradzi Chitakira
World 2025, 6(2), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/world6020051 - 18 Apr 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2682
Abstract
Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) has emerged as a critical strategy to address the intertwined challenges of climate change, food insecurity, and environmental degradation, particularly among smallholder farmers in Southern Africa. This study reviews the existing literature on the adoption and scaling of CSA innovations [...] Read more.
Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) has emerged as a critical strategy to address the intertwined challenges of climate change, food insecurity, and environmental degradation, particularly among smallholder farmers in Southern Africa. This study reviews the existing literature on the adoption and scaling of CSA innovations among smallholder farmers in South Africa, focusing specifically on the roles played by institutional mechanisms, policy frameworks, and market dynamics. The findings reveal that while CSA interventions—such as conservation agriculture, drought-tolerant crop varieties, and precision irrigation—have demonstrated positive outcomes in enhancing productivity, food and nutritional security, and climate resilience, adoption remains uneven and limited. Key barriers include insecure land tenure, insufficient extension and climate information services, limited access to credit and inputs, and fragmented institutional support. The analysis highlights the importance of secure land rights, functional farmer cooperatives, effective NGO involvement, and inclusive governance structures in facilitating CSA adoption. Further, the review critiques the implementation gaps in South Africa’s climate and agricultural policy landscape, despite the existence of comprehensive strategies like the National Climate Change Response Policy and the Agricultural Policy Action Plan. This study concludes that scaling CSA among smallholder farmers requires a holistic, multi-level approach that strengthens institutional coordination, ensures policy coherence, improves market access, and empowers local actors. Targeted financial incentives, capacity-building programs, and value chain integration are essential to transform CSA from a conceptual framework into a practical, scalable solution for sustainable agricultural development in South Africa. Full article
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26 pages, 1377 KiB  
Article
Effectiveness of Agricultural Technology Services on Fertilizer Reduction in Wheat Production in China
by Chenyang Liu, Tiehui Zhu and Ling Xin
Sustainability 2025, 17(7), 2840; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17072840 - 22 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 706
Abstract
Under the intensifying constraints of resources and environment, reducing fertilizer use while enhancing efficiency in China’s grain production has become imperative. This study empirically analyzes the effect of agricultural technical services on fertilizer reduction in wheat production using 2024 micro-survey data. Agricultural technical [...] Read more.
Under the intensifying constraints of resources and environment, reducing fertilizer use while enhancing efficiency in China’s grain production has become imperative. This study empirically analyzes the effect of agricultural technical services on fertilizer reduction in wheat production using 2024 micro-survey data. Agricultural technical services exert a significantly negative influence on the fertilization intensity among wheat growers. In comparison with non-adopters, adopters achieve a reduction in fertilization amounting to 8.351 kg/mu (equivalent to 125.265 kg/ha) and realize a decrease in chemical fertilizer costs of CNY 26.735/mu (or USD 56.625/ha). Additionally, from the perspective of service components heterogeneity, soil testing, formula fertilization, mechanical fertilization, and straw returning significantly contribute to fertilizer reduction. From the perspective of service model heterogeneity, if farmers participating in market-oriented, cooperative, and industrialized services discontinue participation, their fertilizer application intensity would increase by 5.43%, 7.96%, and 12.79%, respectively. Finally, this study calls on the government to further leverage the technological dissemination advantages of agricultural technology service institutions, guide farmers to reduce the use of chemical fertilizers, so as to accelerate the realization of more sustainable agriculture. Full article
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19 pages, 449 KiB  
Article
Does Farmers’ Participation in Skills Training Improve Their Livelihood Capital? An Empirical Study from China
by Huaquan Zhang and Mingxi Yang
Agriculture 2025, 15(7), 679; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15070679 - 22 Mar 2025
Viewed by 654
Abstract
With the rapid development of China’s rural economy, rural collective economic organizations have played a significant role in increasing farmers’ income and promoting rural revitalization. This study aims to explore the impact of farmers’ participation in skills training organized by rural collective economic [...] Read more.
With the rapid development of China’s rural economy, rural collective economic organizations have played a significant role in increasing farmers’ income and promoting rural revitalization. This study aims to explore the impact of farmers’ participation in skills training organized by rural collective economic organizations on their livelihood capital and the underlying mechanisms. Using tracking survey data from rural households in Chongzhou City, Sichuan Province, in 2023, the paper employs empirical analysis methods, including OLS and mediation effect analysis. The results show that participation in skills training organized by rural collective economic organizations enhances farmers’ livelihood capital. The effectiveness of public service delivery by village committees, the network role of farmers’ cooperatives, and the linkage effect of leading agricultural enterprises in driving rural development act as mediating factors. Additionally, the impact of skills training on farmers’ livelihood capital varies according to household characteristics and the attributes of the rural collective economic organizations involved. Therefore, this paper proposes the following policy recommendations: (1) Further strengthen the public service and resource allocation functions of the village committees. (2) Support and optimize the operating entities such as farmer cooperatives and leading agricultural industrialization enterprises. (3) Address the training needs of different groups and enhance the focus and support of grassroots governments for skills training in collective economic organizations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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28 pages, 2262 KiB  
Article
Mitigating the “Empty Shell” Phenomenon in Farmer Professional Cooperatives: Insights Based on Demonstration Cooperative Policies in China
by Jing Yu, Sixian Li, Yaodong Zhou and Lingyu Song
Land 2025, 14(3), 557; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14030557 - 6 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 813
Abstract
Farmer professional cooperatives are essential in promoting China’s rural revitalization. However, the widespread occurrence of “empty shell” cooperatives, which are characterized by operational stagnation and human resource depletion, presents significant challenges to achieving this objective. This study explores the role of award-rated demonstration [...] Read more.
Farmer professional cooperatives are essential in promoting China’s rural revitalization. However, the widespread occurrence of “empty shell” cooperatives, which are characterized by operational stagnation and human resource depletion, presents significant challenges to achieving this objective. This study explores the role of award-rated demonstration cooperatives in addressing this issue by utilizing a unique dataset of 1570 cooperatives from a particular city in Guizhou Province. The analysis employs mediation and moderation effect models and identifies two primary mechanisms. First, the policy improves cooperatives’ access to government subsidies and loan facilities, which helps mitigate constraints related to human resources and operational risks. Second, cooperative characteristics, including member size, education levels, and leading entity, positively influence the effectiveness of these policy measures. Conversely, the equity structure shows a dual moderating effect, reducing policy benefits in resource retention while enhancing them in operational improvement. These findings highlight the intricate relationship between policy design and cooperative attributes in addressing structural inefficiencies and provide valuable insights for strengthening cooperative governance and advancing rural development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Socio-Economic and Political Issues)
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17 pages, 787 KiB  
Article
How Hiring Agricultural Managers Affect Farmland Quality Protection Behavior in Farmers’ Cooperatives—Evidence Based on the Survey of Cooperatives in Sichuan, China
by Guo-Yan Zeng, Jie-Hao Deng and She-Mei Zhang
Land 2025, 14(3), 502; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14030502 - 28 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 448
Abstract
This paper aims to include the human capital elements of agricultural managers in the decision-making process of farmland quality protection behavior in farmers’ cooperatives in an effort to discuss and explore the relationship between hiring agricultural managers and the implementation of farmland quality [...] Read more.
This paper aims to include the human capital elements of agricultural managers in the decision-making process of farmland quality protection behavior in farmers’ cooperatives in an effort to discuss and explore the relationship between hiring agricultural managers and the implementation of farmland quality protection behavior. Based on the survey questionnaire of 436 planting cooperatives in Sichuan, China, in 2021, the Poisson model and mediating effect model were used to explore the impact and mechanism of hiring agricultural managers on farmland quality protection behavior in farmers’ cooperatives. The empirical results reveal that hiring agricultural managers significantly elevates farmland quality protection behavior in farmers’ cooperatives. Compared to cross-period farmland quality protection behavior, hiring agricultural managers has a greater impact on single-period farmland quality protection behavior. Through the improvement of information technology application level, the farmland quality protection behavior in cooperatives can be elevated by hiring agricultural managers, but standardized management has a masking effect between the two. Accordingly, continuous development and growth of the agricultural manager team encourages cooperatives to establish a standardized system for recruiting farm managers and strengthen the link between farm managers and cooperatives. The training of agricultural managers should be optimized to deepen their mastery of techniques and knowledge and protect the quality of arable land. Material and moral incentives should be provided to encourage farm managers to focus on the long-term development of their cooperatives. The government should be encouraged to establish a platform for sharing information on farmland quality to provide technical support to farm managers to carry out targeted work on farmland quality protection. Full article
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17 pages, 414 KiB  
Article
Impact of Farmer Cooperatives on Labor Employment: Evidence from Rural China
by Yutong Qiu, Yunli Bai, Jiaojiao Wu, Xuanye Zeng and Linxiu Zhang
Land 2024, 13(12), 2242; https://doi.org/10.3390/land13122242 - 21 Dec 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1479
Abstract
Farmer cooperatives are one of the types of important entities for agricultural production and rural community development in China. This study aims to examine the effects of farmer cooperatives on rural labor employment and explores the mechanisms from the perspective of institutional advantage, [...] Read more.
Farmer cooperatives are one of the types of important entities for agricultural production and rural community development in China. This study aims to examine the effects of farmer cooperatives on rural labor employment and explores the mechanisms from the perspective of institutional advantage, factor redistribution, and value chain. Leveraging two-waved panel data from the China Rural Development Survey, a multinomial Logit model and Tobit model with panel data are adopted. The results show that farmer cooperatives significantly boost rural labor employment, with a more pronounced effect on fully farming and part-time farming. These effects are primarily seen through three mechanisms: income augmentation stemming from institutional advantages, factor redistribution by land transferring and technology service/adoption, as well as industrial clusters. The limited value chain extension of farmer cooperatives hinders its role in improving fully non-agricultural employment. The findings suggest that the government should support the high-quality development of farmer cooperatives to facilitate rural labor employment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Socio-Economic and Political Issues)
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25 pages, 327 KiB  
Article
Village Organization and Sustainable Growth of Farmers’ Income: An Empirical Study Based on Dynamic Survey Data of the Labor Force in China
by Qinghao Wang, Chentao Zhang, Mingyue Gong and Beiqi Zhu
Sustainability 2024, 16(21), 9377; https://doi.org/10.3390/su16219377 - 29 Oct 2024
Viewed by 1375
Abstract
Common prosperity is the core goal of rural revitalization, and the sustainable growth of farmers’ income is an inevitable requirement. This study uses CLDS2014-2018 village- and family-level questionnaire data to reveal how the degree of village organization affects the sustainable growth of farmers’ [...] Read more.
Common prosperity is the core goal of rural revitalization, and the sustainable growth of farmers’ income is an inevitable requirement. This study uses CLDS2014-2018 village- and family-level questionnaire data to reveal how the degree of village organization affects the sustainable growth of farmers’ income, thus providing a reference for local government decision-making to promote the increase in farmers’ income and narrow the income gap at the village level. The results show that the degree of village organization can significantly affect farmers’ income, and the analysis results of the degree of formal organization are consistent with this. Specifically, for every 1% increase in the degree of village organization, the per capita household income will increase by 0.324%, among which, the wage income will increase by 0.226%, the operational income will increase by 5%, the property income will increase by 0.008%, and the transfer income will increase by 0.042%. The estimation results obtained by using instrumental variables are consistent, and the results are robust. At the same time, improving the degree of village organization can also significantly increase the proportion of farmers’ non-agricultural income and narrow the income gap among farmers. On the impact of heterogeneity, it was found that the geographical distance between villages and county and township governments, as well as the political identity and education level of farmers, will affect the role of the degree of organization. The results of the mechanism analysis show that improving the degree of village organization is mainly achieved by promoting the circulation of agricultural land, socializing the service of agricultural machinery, and providing industrial and commercial capital to the countryside to increase farmers’ income. The research revealed that the modernization of rural governance should be accelerated and the degree of village organization should be improved, especially the degree of formal organization, so as to build benign trust and a cooperative relationship between village committees and villagers and implement policies and measures that improve the income of farmers according to local conditions. At the same time, this will strengthen the publicity and education of party members to improve the proportion of rural party members and the education level of farmers. Full article
27 pages, 350 KiB  
Article
The Impact of Land Transfer on Sustainable Agricultural Development from the Perspective of Green Total Factor Productivity
by Yangchenhao Wu and Wang Zhang
Sustainability 2024, 16(16), 7076; https://doi.org/10.3390/su16167076 - 18 Aug 2024
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 1945
Abstract
China’s agricultural sector is transitioning from extensive management to intensive management, and land transfer brings about changes in land use and management methods, which may encourage the agricultural sector to enter a sustainable development track, but this mechanism has not been effectively proven. [...] Read more.
China’s agricultural sector is transitioning from extensive management to intensive management, and land transfer brings about changes in land use and management methods, which may encourage the agricultural sector to enter a sustainable development track, but this mechanism has not been effectively proven. Using the SBM-GML index to construct a green total factor productivity index to measure the level of sustainable agricultural development in each province (or autonomous region or municipality directly under the central government) and provincial panel data from 2010 to 2022, we applied a panel interactive fixed-effects model to empirically test the impact of land transfer on sustainable agricultural development, with a focus on analyzing the heterogeneity and related mechanisms of this impact. The results indicate that (1) land transfer significantly promotes sustainable agricultural development, and this conclusion still held true after robustness tests such as controlling for regional omitted variables, replacing dependent variables, changing the sample size, IV estimation, and GMM estimation. (2) The mechanism testing found that land transfer mainly promotes sustainable agricultural development by increasing the desirable output, and has no significant effect on reducing non-point source pollution. At the same time, land transfer mainly improves the desirable output through factor allocation effects rather than scale operation effects, thereby promoting sustainable agricultural development. (3) The heterogeneity analysis found that the higher the quantile of agricultural development level is, the weaker the role of land transfer in promoting sustainable agricultural development, indicating that land transfer has a greater impact on areas with poor agricultural development foundations, and areas with poor agricultural development foundations are more likely to obtain sustainable development space through land transfer. The impact of different land transfer methods and land transfer objects on sustainable agricultural development was heterogeneous. Compared with non-market transfer methods such as exchange and transfer, market-oriented transfer methods such as leasing and equity had a more significant impact on sustainable agricultural development. Compared to transferring land to ordinary farmers, transferring land to new business entities such as family farms, professional cooperatives, and enterprises can significantly promote sustainable agricultural development. Full article
21 pages, 3225 KiB  
Article
Research on Agricultural Machinery Services for the Purpose of Promoting Conservation Agriculture: An Evolutionary Game Analysis Involving Farmers, Agricultural Machinery Service Organizations and Governments
by Fan Zhang, Jindi Bei, Qingzhe Shi, Ying Wang and Ling Wu
Agriculture 2024, 14(8), 1383; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14081383 - 16 Aug 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1905
Abstract
Agricultural machinery services are an important guaranteed way to promote Conservation Agriculture. It is of great significance to study how to encourage farmers to choose agricultural machinery services to promote the standard implementation of Conservation Agriculture technology. In order to promote the implementation [...] Read more.
Agricultural machinery services are an important guaranteed way to promote Conservation Agriculture. It is of great significance to study how to encourage farmers to choose agricultural machinery services to promote the standard implementation of Conservation Agriculture technology. In order to promote the implementation of Conservation Agriculture and improve the supply of agricultural machinery services, this paper identifies the stakeholders of normative Conservation Agriculture technology adoption behavior and the relationship between agricultural machinery service organizations, farmers and agriculture-related governments. An evolutionary game model was established to evaluate the decision-making characteristics of tripartite behavior and simulate the evolution trend of stakeholder behavior. The results show that agriculture-related governments, agricultural machinery service organizations and farmers can achieve evolutionarily stable strategies. The punishments and subsidies of agriculture-related governments and the supervision cost of all links of agricultural machinery social service organizations can significantly affect the behavior strategies of the three parties. The government set up reasonable subsidy and punishment mechanisms, and the agricultural machinery service organization controls the supervision cost of all links to ensure the stability of the three-party behavior strategy. This study provides theoretical guidance for scientific decision making and active cooperative development of the government, farmers and agricultural machinery service organizations and lays a foundation for countermeasures and suggestions to further promote farmers’ implementation of Conservation Agriculture technology. Full article
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