PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Jumbe, Charles Blessings Laurence AU - Angelsen, Arild TI - Do the Poor Benefit from Devolution Policies? Evidence from Malawi’s Forest Co-Management Program AID - 10.3368/le.82.4.562 DP - 2006 Nov 01 TA - Land Economics PG - 562--581 VI - 82 IP - 4 4099 - http://le.uwpress.org/content/82/4/562.short 4100 - http://le.uwpress.org/content/82/4/562.full SO - Land Econ2006 Nov 01; 82 AB - Do local people, especially vulnerable households, benefit from devolution of forest management? We apply the propensity-score matching and decomposition techniques on household data from Chimaliro and Liwonde forest reserves under the pilot forest co-management program in Malawi. After controlling for selection bias, we find that while the program raises forest income for participants in Chimaliro, it reduces revenue for participants in Liwonde. Interestingly, results indicate that the program raises forest income for female and low-income participants, although male and richer participants capture more benefits due to discrimination and endowment differences accounting for 100% and 60% of the inter-group income disparity, respectively. (JEL Q23, O13)