1. Introduction
Guided by the global sustainable development goals, the harmonious advancement of socioeconomic development and ecological conservation has emerged as a pressing need of our time [
1]. Forest resources, being vital components of the Earth’s ecosystem, play an indispensable role in maintaining ecological balance, enhancing living environments, and regulating the global climate [
2]. As a major holder of forestry resources worldwide [
3], China boasts collective forestlands that account for 60% of the national forest area, implicating over 100 million farm households and 500 million farmers. These areas significantly overlap with regions historically involved in revolutions, ethnic minority regions, border areas, and economically underdeveloped zones, making them pivotal battlefields for advancing rural revitalization and achieving common prosperity [
4]. In recent years, China’s forestry sector has witnessed rapid growth, with its output value soaring to 8.04 trillion yuan by 2022, marking a multiplication of over 3000 times compared to the founding period of the People’s Republic [
5]. Accompanying this, ecological restoration efforts have proven highly effective, with China leading the world in afforestation, contributing approximately 70% of the globe’s total area. Notably, the forestry sector has not only facilitated the transformation of rural economies but also provided employment for over 52 million individuals [
6], thereby solidifying its position as a robust catalyst for rural rejuvenation and green economic transition.
However, the long-term development of forestry still faces significant challenges such as insufficient capital investment and inadequate financing mechanisms [
7,
8]. As the main body of the forestry economy, forestry farmers have limited financing channels and high financing costs, which limit the improvement of income and welfare [
9,
10]. In response to these challenges, since 2008, China has embarked on collective forest tenure reforms, endeavoring to empower forest right holders and facilitating land transfer and mortgaging, thus carving new paths for forestry capital operations [
11]. Despite continuous policy endeavors to innovate with diversified financing mechanisms and broaden funding avenues, the disparity between supply and demand for forestry capital remains acute. Structural issues within the forestry capital market, including inadequate investment and a reliance on singular financing channels, persist as formidable challenges [
10,
11].
In this context, Sanming City, situated in Fujian Province, China, stands as a forefront runner in the realm of Collective Forestry Tenure Reform, having innovatively initiated the Forest Ticket System in 2019. This pioneering system is meticulously designed to invigorate the rural collective forestland resources by leveraging the financial prowess of forest tickets. It seeks to facilitate the asset securitization and market circulation of forestry resources, fostering an efficacious interface between resources, capital, and the marketplace. By enhancing the monetization of ecological assets, it paves the way for augmenting rural incomes. Central to this systemic blueprint are the hallmarks of “collaborative operations, quantified rights, unfettered liquidity, and assured dividends”, strategically aimed at transcending the confines of conventional forestry management paradigms and catalyzing the modern transformation of the forestry economy.
Despite the initial successes of the forest ticket reform, the current implementation of the forest ticket system remains heavily government-driven and reliant on public funds, with limited participation from private capital and insufficient trading activity in forest tickets. Central to the objectives of the forest ticket system is the need for these instruments to circulate in the open market, a crucial step toward revitalizing collective forest resources. Here, small-scale forest farmers constitute the bedrock of the forest ticket trading market and are key stakeholders in the system; their active engagement is vital for the sustainability of the forest ticket system. Nonetheless, in practice, the system has encountered hurdles in attracting and accommodating these farmers, resulting in lower-than-anticipated participation levels and a sluggish trading pace, thereby impeding the full realization of market-oriented circulation for forest tickets [
12].
So, what exactly restricts farmers from participating in forest ticket trading? The core lies in exploring how the innovative forestry financing model of forest vouchers can be accepted by farmers in complex decision-making environments. Previous studies have revealed three key influencing dimensions: Firstly, macro external environmental factors, such as urban expansion and policy orientation, indirectly affect the transaction decisions of farmers by influencing the stability of forest land rights [
13,
14]. Secondly, the micro level environmental characteristics cover the social network, information accessibility, investment opportunities, and diversified expectations of farmers, which directly affect their willingness to participate [
15,
16,
17]. Furthermore, the individual characteristics of farmers themselves, such as educational resources and family asset status, are also important considerations [
18]. It is particularly noteworthy that small-scale forest farmers, due to their limited education level and information channels, often have an opaque decision-making environment, which directly affects their understanding and acceptance of forest tickets [
19,
20]. The quality and quantity of information, as well as the means of obtaining it, are the foundation of farmers’ behavioral choices [
21,
22].
Despite notable advancements in the investigation of farmer conduct, financial mechanisms in forestry, and the nascent forest ticket system, empirical inquiries into this innovative financing model, particularly the forest ticket, remain underdeveloped, a shortfall exacerbated within the milieu of incomplete farmer information. Concurrently, given farmers’ pivotal role as the nucleus of the forestry economy, a chasm persists in understanding their behavioral dynamics within the realm of forest ticket transactions. Therefore, this study focuses on farmers as the micro-subject. Through field research and questionnaire surveys, combined with the characteristics of forest tickets as a new thing and the limitations of the information environment of farmers, it deeply analyzes the factors that affect the willingness of farmers to trade forest tickets, and explores the regulatory effect of social capital. This not only provides empirical support for the optimization design of ticket systems and the improvement of market efficiency, but also identifies practical obstacles to the promotion of forest ticket systems. It provides guidance for policy innovation to solve forestry financing difficulties and promote win-win cooperation between forestry and ecology, fills the gap in research on forest ticket systems from the perspective of farmers, and demonstrates significant theoretical value and practical significance.
Furthermore, as the world’s foremost developing nation, China shares commonalities with other developing economies in its urban–rural bifurcation, the challenge of effectively gathering farmer information, and the traditional features of rural social capital. The extent to which farmers acknowledge and embrace the nascent forest ticket trading paradigm, along with their subsequent willingness to engage, emerges as a pivotal determinant influencing the efficacy of this policy instrument. Thus, investigating Chinese farmers’ inclination towards engaging in forest ticket transactions amidst an incomplete information scenario is instrumental in unraveling the fundamental mechanics and behavioral logic inherent to China’s forest tenure transformation. It serves as a beacon, offering valuable insights for the design and execution of comparable policy interventions in varied international settings. Concurrently, this line of inquiry amplifies the theoretical breadth of forestry economics, highlighting its multifaceted significance across empirical analyses, comparative studies, and theoretical explorations.
5. Conclusions
5.1. Conclusions
Based on micro farmer survey data in Sanming City, Fujian Province, China, a theoretical analysis framework was constructed to examine the factors influencing the willingness of farmers to participate in forest ticket trading in an incomplete information environment. The factors influencing the willingness of farmers to participate in forest ticket trading were empirically tested, and the heterogeneity of farmers’ willingness to participate in forest ticket trading was examined under different part-time job and educational levels. Furthermore, the moderating effect of social capital was analyzed. The following conclusions can be drawn from this study:
In an environment of incomplete information, the willingness of farmers to participate in forest ticket trading is influenced by heterogeneous expectations (profit expectations, cost expectations, risk expectations, and policy sustainability expectations), social capital, government propaganda, and individual family characteristics.
There are certain differences in the influencing factors and degree of willingness of farmers to participate in forest ticket trading among different groups of farmers with different levels of education and part-time work. Cost expectations and social participation have a more significant impact on the transaction willingness of non-part-time farmers, while policy sustainability expectations have a stronger promoting effect on non-part-time farmers. Social participation has a more significant impact on the transaction willingness of farmers with lower levels of education.
Social capital plays a moderating role in the impact of expected returns, expected risks, and expected policy sustainability on the willingness of farmers to participate in forest ticket trading. Social capital can strengthen the positive impact of expected returns and expected policy sustainability, and alleviate the negative impact of expected risks.
5.2. Suggestions
Based on the research findings and considering the current situation in the study area, we propose the following policy recommendations.
Firstly, strengthen social capital and communication. Bolster the social capital of farmers by leveraging social networks and new media platforms to construct multi-tiered communication channels. Foster active rural collective activities, enforce democratic oversight mechanisms, and thereby boost farmers’ confidence in government policies and forest ticket transactions. Cultivate rural leaders and influencers to set positive examples and spearhead broader engagement in the system.
Secondly, enhance publicity and education. Amplify public awareness campaigns aimed at educating farmers about the value and utility of forest tickets. Employ a hybrid strategy combining online and offline outreach to disseminate relevant knowledge and policy updates, bridging the information divide among farmers. Strengthen grassroot-level information service systems to provide farmers with easily accessible consultation services.
Thirdly, optimize participation policies. Tailor participation policies to cater to diverse farmer profiles. For instance, incentivize non-farming professionals and societal investors by lowering transaction costs and mitigating risk perceptions. Offer financial backing to farmers who treat forest tickets as investment instruments.
Fourthly, diversify trading targets and value enhancement. Broaden the range of entities that can trade forest tickets to enhance their intrinsic value. Grounded in sustainable forest management, develop a green supply chain to imbue forest tickets with greater economic significance. Work towards the securitization of forest tickets and introduce a market maker system in secondary markets to boost liquidity and augment farmer incomes.
Fifth, establish a robust trading platform. Create a dedicated forest ticket trading platform that supplies essential information to buyers and sellers. Rely on regulated exchanges to standardize transactions, enact appropriate laws, regulations, and trading norms. Enhance market supervision, encompassing forest resource monitoring, pricing controls, and so forth. Implement a risk mitigation framework by setting up forestry insurance schemes against natural hazards, refining the intermediary service ecosystem, and instituting a legal protection system. Ensuring fair and transparent dealings will minimize uncertainties and mitigate potential disputes, thereby promoting a stable and secure environment for farmers to transact in forest tickets.
5.3. Research Limitations and Prospects
Indeed, while this study makes strides in examining the determinants of farmers’ inclination to partake in forest ticket trading and introduces an empirical analysis grounded in incomplete information theory, several constraints merit acknowledgment:
Relying on data sourced from a 2022 field survey conducted in Sanming, Fujian, China, the generalizability of findings might be circumscribed.
While recognizing social capital’s multidimensionality (encompassing social networks, trust, norms, and participation), capturing its full complexity remains a challenge. Its intangible qualities necessitate sophisticated measurement techniques, and current methodologies might inadequately reflect its true impact on farmers’ participatory inclinations. This could lead to an underestimation of social capital’s pivotal role in fostering engagement with forest ticket trading.
As an innovative financial instrument unique to China’s forestry sector, forest ticket trading is still in its nascent stages, with comprehensive market dynamics yet to unfold. The incomplete information theory framework, though insightful, oversimplifies the intricate decision-making calculus of farmers in real-world scenarios. Factors unaccounted for in this study, such as evolving market prices, policy shifts, psychological, cultural, and historical nuances, are likely to exert influence on farmers’ decisions as the system matures. Future research should strive to incorporate these multifaceted aspects, delving deeper into individual farmers’ experiences, behaviors, and resultant benefits to enrich our understanding of this emergent economic phenomenon.