The relative importance of community forests, government forests, and private forests for household-level incomes in the Middle Hills of Nepal

Type Journal Article - Forest Policy and Economics
Title The relative importance of community forests, government forests, and private forests for household-level incomes in the Middle Hills of Nepal
Author(s)
Volume 70
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
Page numbers 155-163
URL http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1389934116301459
Abstract
To investigate the household-level economic importance of income from forests under different tenure arrangements,
data were collected from 304 stratified randomly sampled households within 10 villages with community
forest user groups in Tanahun District, Western Nepal. We observed that forest income contributed 5.8% to total
household income, ranging from 3.8% in the top income quartile to 17.4% in the lowest quartile. Analyses of poverty
indices and Gini decomposition showed that incorporating forest incomes in total household income reduces
measured rural poverty and income inequality. Community forestry income constituted 49.7% of forest
income, followed by 27.5% from government-managed forest, and 22.8% from private forests/trees. Community
forestry income, however, contributed more than other sources of forest income to income inequality, indicating
elite capture. We argue that a full realisation of community forestry's poverty reduction and income equalizing
potential requires modifications of rules that govern forest extraction and pricing at community forest user
group level.

Related studies

»