Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

Standard

Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries. / Salazar Espinoza, César Antonio.

Copenhagen : Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2017. 158 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

Harvard

Salazar Espinoza, CA 2017, Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen. <https://www.econ.ku.dk/forskning/Publikationer/ph.d_serie_2007-/Ph.D.186.pdf>

APA

Salazar Espinoza, C. A. (2017). Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen. https://www.econ.ku.dk/forskning/Publikationer/ph.d_serie_2007-/Ph.D.186.pdf

Vancouver

Salazar Espinoza CA. Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries. Copenhagen: Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2017. 158 s.

Author

Salazar Espinoza, César Antonio. / Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries. Copenhagen : Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2017. 158 s.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{602dbdb2afe14e569cd858d7cd571e52,
title = "Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries",
abstract = "This thesis consists of 4 self-contained papers, all examining how production risk from natural shocks affects decisions regarding the management of natural resources and agriculture in a developing country context. This challenge is addressed empirically using different rigorous microeconometric approaches. Three of the chapters investigate households{\textquoteright} risk-management strategies in resource-based activities, while a fourth chapter focuses on market functioning at the face of climate shocks. The first chapter is developed on the basis of a unique census data from artisanal fisheries in Chile. The objective is to examine the mechanisms by which revenues are distributed to labor and capital, and how these distributions affect fishing returns. The results support mechanisms associated with bargaining power, monitoring costs and outside options, and also reveal higher fishing return with larger crew profit shares. Effects seem to differ across fisheries. The second chapter uses a balanced panel of rural households from Mozambique to provide an empirical examination of the impact of weather shocks on crop portfolio choices as well as on the persistency of these changes. Results indicate that crop choice is sensitive to past weather shocks, and reallocation seems temporary. This is consistent with a self-insurance approach and buffer stock arguments. The third chapter employs rural household data of rice producers from Vietnam to examine the risk effect of pesticide use. Results reveal that higher uncertainty regarding rainfall relative to pest may cause pesticide use is to exhibit risk-increasing characteristics. This finding is consistent across a lottery and a production function approach. The fourth chapter studies the link between spatial market efficiency and weather shocks using market price and transport cost data from Mozambique. Results indicate that price dispersion is lower during drought period and higher after a flood. This finding is consistent with a supply shock after a drought and a food transport shock emerging after a flood. Moreover, flood effects are larger among closer markets and connected with poorer infrastructure.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences",
author = "{Salazar Espinoza}, {C{\'e}sar Antonio}",
year = "2017",
month = feb,
language = "English",
isbn = "9788793428096",
publisher = "Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",
address = "Denmark",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries

AU - Salazar Espinoza, César Antonio

PY - 2017/2

Y1 - 2017/2

N2 - This thesis consists of 4 self-contained papers, all examining how production risk from natural shocks affects decisions regarding the management of natural resources and agriculture in a developing country context. This challenge is addressed empirically using different rigorous microeconometric approaches. Three of the chapters investigate households’ risk-management strategies in resource-based activities, while a fourth chapter focuses on market functioning at the face of climate shocks. The first chapter is developed on the basis of a unique census data from artisanal fisheries in Chile. The objective is to examine the mechanisms by which revenues are distributed to labor and capital, and how these distributions affect fishing returns. The results support mechanisms associated with bargaining power, monitoring costs and outside options, and also reveal higher fishing return with larger crew profit shares. Effects seem to differ across fisheries. The second chapter uses a balanced panel of rural households from Mozambique to provide an empirical examination of the impact of weather shocks on crop portfolio choices as well as on the persistency of these changes. Results indicate that crop choice is sensitive to past weather shocks, and reallocation seems temporary. This is consistent with a self-insurance approach and buffer stock arguments. The third chapter employs rural household data of rice producers from Vietnam to examine the risk effect of pesticide use. Results reveal that higher uncertainty regarding rainfall relative to pest may cause pesticide use is to exhibit risk-increasing characteristics. This finding is consistent across a lottery and a production function approach. The fourth chapter studies the link between spatial market efficiency and weather shocks using market price and transport cost data from Mozambique. Results indicate that price dispersion is lower during drought period and higher after a flood. This finding is consistent with a supply shock after a drought and a food transport shock emerging after a flood. Moreover, flood effects are larger among closer markets and connected with poorer infrastructure.

AB - This thesis consists of 4 self-contained papers, all examining how production risk from natural shocks affects decisions regarding the management of natural resources and agriculture in a developing country context. This challenge is addressed empirically using different rigorous microeconometric approaches. Three of the chapters investigate households’ risk-management strategies in resource-based activities, while a fourth chapter focuses on market functioning at the face of climate shocks. The first chapter is developed on the basis of a unique census data from artisanal fisheries in Chile. The objective is to examine the mechanisms by which revenues are distributed to labor and capital, and how these distributions affect fishing returns. The results support mechanisms associated with bargaining power, monitoring costs and outside options, and also reveal higher fishing return with larger crew profit shares. Effects seem to differ across fisheries. The second chapter uses a balanced panel of rural households from Mozambique to provide an empirical examination of the impact of weather shocks on crop portfolio choices as well as on the persistency of these changes. Results indicate that crop choice is sensitive to past weather shocks, and reallocation seems temporary. This is consistent with a self-insurance approach and buffer stock arguments. The third chapter employs rural household data of rice producers from Vietnam to examine the risk effect of pesticide use. Results reveal that higher uncertainty regarding rainfall relative to pest may cause pesticide use is to exhibit risk-increasing characteristics. This finding is consistent across a lottery and a production function approach. The fourth chapter studies the link between spatial market efficiency and weather shocks using market price and transport cost data from Mozambique. Results indicate that price dispersion is lower during drought period and higher after a flood. This finding is consistent with a supply shock after a drought and a food transport shock emerging after a flood. Moreover, flood effects are larger among closer markets and connected with poorer infrastructure.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

M3 - Ph.D. thesis

SN - 9788793428096

BT - Essays on risk management of natural resources in developing countries

PB - Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen

CY - Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 182543641