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of their economic, juridical and social significance. Apparently
the Swiss cadastre recently introduced the orthoohoto technique
as the official cadastral method in the mountains; a modest move,
which, however, could have very positive world-wide consequences.
These of course are well developed, densely built-up, rich
countries, and their procedures in establishing a cadastre would
be prohibitively expensive to introduce in a developing country.
There are much more efficient ways to achieve the basic goals of
a multipurpose cadastre.
Category 11 : These are advanced and rich countries but with
a poor tradition in surveying and mapping and resulting weak
university education in the field. They are wasteful in their
general survey structure and, in general, lack organization in
their survey work. Cadastre does not exist, which results in a
great economic loss to the country. In 1980 a booklet of 112
pages titled "The Need for a Multipurpose Cadastre" was published
by a group of U.S.A. experts under the auspices of the National
Research Council of the U.S.A. It contains a large amount of
data on the consequences of a lack of a logical, integrated,
large-scale surveying and mapping system in the form of a
cadastre. The publication refers to the United States but a
similar situation can be found in other countries. I can quote
only one or two excerpts from this publication, such as the
foil owing ;
"Title and assessment record systems are labor intensive and
do not provide necessary information about land in a timely,
unambiguous, authoratative and economic manner... At the
county level (State of Wisconsin) the form of land recording
remains essentially unchanged from the 1600*5. At the state
and federal levels of government, many different agencies
col 1 ect a_ great deal of raw data without effectiv e
coordination or integration, thus collecting again and again
the same basic information about essentially the same land".
(Pages 16 and 17 of the publication).
"Some government information is so inaccessible that it is
nearly "confidential". Ultimately, puolic and private land
decisions are made in ignorance of the facts". (Page 23).
One of the consequences of the lack of a modern, multipurpose
cadastre system is the awesome waste of money on unproductive
formalities of land transfer. The above mentioned publication
states :
"ihese costs (of land transfer) must: be borne by the parties
to the transaction. It has been estimated that this land-
transfer costs in 1974 exceeded $17 billion in the United
Stated for residential and farm real estate"'. (Page Xo) .
(All the underlinings and explanations in brackets in the above
are mine.)
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