How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis

Unanticipated events can cause considerable economic hardship for poor rural households. Some types of negative shocks, for example weather‐related agricultural losses and vector‐borne diseases, are expected to occur more frequently as a result of climate change. In this paper we measure the role of...

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Main Authors: Börner, J., Shively, G.E., Wunder, Sven, Wyman, M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95428
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author Börner, J.
Shively, G.E.
Wunder, Sven
Wyman, M.
author_browse Börner, J.
Shively, G.E.
Wunder, Sven
Wyman, M.
author_facet Börner, J.
Shively, G.E.
Wunder, Sven
Wyman, M.
author_sort Börner, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Unanticipated events can cause considerable economic hardship for poor rural households. Some types of negative shocks, for example weather‐related agricultural losses and vector‐borne diseases, are expected to occur more frequently as a result of climate change. In this paper we measure the role of household‐ and location‐specific characteristics in conditioning behavioural responses to a wide range of idiosyncratic and covariate shocks. We use data from 8,000 rural households in 25 developing countries, compiled in the global database of the Poverty Environment Network. We employ a hierarchical multinomial logit model to identify the importance of characteristics observed at different levels of aggregation on a set of strategies aimed at coping with economic shocks. Results indicate that in response to idiosyncratic shocks, households tend to deplete financial and durable assets, whereas covariate and thus often climate‐related shocks predominantly result in reduced consumption. Households in sites characterised by high asset wealth tend to cope with shocks in a more proactive way than those in sites with average or below average asset wealth, but the role of asset types in conditioning shock responses varies across regions. Our findings have implications for rural development and climate change adaptation strategies.
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spelling CGSpace954282025-06-17T08:23:38Z How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis Börner, J. Shively, G.E. Wunder, Sven Wyman, M. climate change economic development forest resources poverty vulnerability Unanticipated events can cause considerable economic hardship for poor rural households. Some types of negative shocks, for example weather‐related agricultural losses and vector‐borne diseases, are expected to occur more frequently as a result of climate change. In this paper we measure the role of household‐ and location‐specific characteristics in conditioning behavioural responses to a wide range of idiosyncratic and covariate shocks. We use data from 8,000 rural households in 25 developing countries, compiled in the global database of the Poverty Environment Network. We employ a hierarchical multinomial logit model to identify the importance of characteristics observed at different levels of aggregation on a set of strategies aimed at coping with economic shocks. Results indicate that in response to idiosyncratic shocks, households tend to deplete financial and durable assets, whereas covariate and thus often climate‐related shocks predominantly result in reduced consumption. Households in sites characterised by high asset wealth tend to cope with shocks in a more proactive way than those in sites with average or below average asset wealth, but the role of asset types in conditioning shock responses varies across regions. Our findings have implications for rural development and climate change adaptation strategies. 2015-06 2018-07-03T11:02:58Z 2018-07-03T11:02:58Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95428 en Limited Access Wiley Börner, J., Shively, G., Wunder, S., Wyman, M.. 2015. How do rural households cope with economic shocks ? : Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis. Journal of Agricultural Economics, 66 (2) : 392-414. https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-9552.12097
spellingShingle climate change
economic development
forest resources
poverty
vulnerability
Börner, J.
Shively, G.E.
Wunder, Sven
Wyman, M.
How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis
title How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis
title_full How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis
title_fullStr How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis
title_full_unstemmed How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis
title_short How do rural households cope with economic shocks ?: Insights from global data using hierarchical analysis
title_sort how do rural households cope with economic shocks insights from global data using hierarchical analysis
topic climate change
economic development
forest resources
poverty
vulnerability
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95428
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