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Land Circulation, Scale Operation, and Agricultural Carbon Reduction Efficiency: Evidence from China

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  • Haonan Song
  • Hui Jiang
  • Shiyun Zhang
  • Jingdong Luan
  • Daqing Gong

Abstract

Based on the panel data of 30 Chinese province in 2005–2018, this paper quantifies agricultural carbon reduction efficiency (CRE), using the slack-based measure (SBM)-data envelopment analysis (DEA) model with undesired outputs (SBM-DEA∗), and empirically tests that development of land circulation market directly affects agricultural CRE, and indirectly affects agricultural CRE via scale operation of farmland. The results show that the following: (1) In the observation period, China’s agricultural CREs generally evolved from a low level to a high level, with an annual growth rate of 8.0%, but there is still a large space of carbon reduction. (2) Overall, land circulation significantly promoted agricultural CRE, but the promoting effect varied from region to region: the promoting effect was significant in eastern and central regions, and insignificant in western region. (3) Scale operation of farmland had a nonlinear, partial mediation effect on how land circulation influences agricultural CRE; land circulation greatly accelerated the scale operation of farmland, while the growing scale of farmland utilization had an inverted U-shaped influence on agricultural CRE. Our research results imply that promoting land circulation directly drives the low-carbon transformation of agriculture in China, but excessive scale operation of farmland might hinder agricultural carbon reduction.

Suggested Citation

  • Haonan Song & Hui Jiang & Shiyun Zhang & Jingdong Luan & Daqing Gong, 2021. "Land Circulation, Scale Operation, and Agricultural Carbon Reduction Efficiency: Evidence from China," Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society, Hindawi, vol. 2021, pages 1-12, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:hin:jnddns:9288895
    DOI: 10.1155/2021/9288895
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    Cited by:

    1. Meseret Abatechanie & Baozhong Cai & Fang Shi & Yuanji Huang, 2022. "The Environmental and Socio-Economic Effect of Farmland Management Right Transfer in China: A Systematic Review," Land, MDPI, vol. 11(8), pages 1-21, August.

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