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Category: Development

Does Adaptation to Climate Change Provide Food Security?

That’s the title of a new paper by Di Falco et al. in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics (a previous, ungated version can be found here, but note that the two versions differ substantially):

“We examine the driving forces behind farm households’ decisions to adapt to climate change, and the impact of adaptation on farm households’ food productivity. We estimate a simultaneous equations model with endogenous switching to account for the heterogeneity in the decision to adapt or not, and for unobservable characteristics of farmers and their farm. Access to credit, extension and information are found to be the main drivers behind adaptation. We find that adaptation increases food productivity, that the farm households that did not adapt would benefit the most from adaptation.”

This is a very interesting research question and that the core result is interesting (and no, I was not a referee for this paper, nor do I know the authors.) From skimming the paper, however, I’m not sure the relationship between adaptation to climate change and productivity is causal. Because the remainder of this post is pretty technical, I am putting it under the fold.

More on Micro-Insurance

More often than not, economic underdevelopment is explained by development economists as being the consequence of multiple market failures. Among these market failures is the lack of insurance markets in most developing countries, which forces individuals and households into sinking considerable resources into averting major risks.

Suppose you are the head of a rural household in an African country. One such risk is the risk you will lose your assets. For example, you could lose some of your land as a consequence of land redistribution within the community, or a disease could decimate a significant fraction of your livestock.