The farmland protection compensation system plays a pivotal role in addressing the dual global crises of food insecurity and ecological degradation, as well as in overcoming persistent challenges in China’s agricultural governance. By internalizing the opportunity costs borne by stakeholders fulfilling statutory obligations for farmland protection, this mechanism offers effective incentives for their active engagement, thereby establishing a societal-level interest-balancing framework conducive to sustainable land management. Existing research in China has mainly concentrated on empirical analyses of implementation models, regional disparities, and policy effectiveness evaluations of farmland protection compensation schemes. Nevertheless, systematic exploration of the normative construction and improvement pathways of the compensation rules themselves remains relatively underdeveloped. Based on the practical requirements and institutional constraints of China’s current farmland protection compensation regime, this study adopts an integrated approach that combines comparative legal analysis, textual review of regulatory documents, and empirical research to critically examine feasible paths for institutional improvement. The research findings emphasize that the optimization of China’s farmland protection compensation rules should be guided by three core principles: market orientation, ecological sustainability, and precision-based targeting. Specifically, the establishment of scientifically sound methods for calculating compensation amounts is crucial for reconciling the interests of conservation actors with inter-regional development disparities. Meanwhile, the compensation mechanism should be strategically utilized to strengthen positive incentives for ecosystem conservation. Ultimately, such institutional improvement aims to ensure the sustainable utilization of farmland resources while safeguarding global food security and maintaining the Earth’s ecological balance.
Xu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.