Risk and investment: Evidence from rural Viet Nam
Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
Standard
Risk and investment : Evidence from rural Viet Nam. / Newman, Carol; Tarp, Finn.
2018.Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Author
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - UNPB
T1 - Risk and investment
T2 - Evidence from rural Viet Nam
AU - Newman, Carol
AU - Tarp, Finn
PY - 2018/10
Y1 - 2018/10
N2 - This paper explores the impact of exposure to uninsured risks on the investment decisions of farmers. We distinguish between households’ perceived exposure to uninsured risk, measured as past exposure to deviations in average rainfall levels, and the actual realization of shocks.We examine how households cope with the latter in terms of consumption smoothing and the depletion of assets. We also consider the interaction between past weather-risk exposure and the actual realization of weather shocks to ascertain the extent to which the investment strategies of risk-exposed households ‘pay off’ by buffering them in the face of actual shocks. We use panel data on rice farmers in Viet Nam for the 2008–16 period and match this to annual rainfall data.Our results show that households that are exposed to risk invest more in unproductive assets to avoid the downside risk associated with exposure to flooding. This translates into lower income levels. The investment in these assets does not appear to pay off once actual risks are realized.
AB - This paper explores the impact of exposure to uninsured risks on the investment decisions of farmers. We distinguish between households’ perceived exposure to uninsured risk, measured as past exposure to deviations in average rainfall levels, and the actual realization of shocks.We examine how households cope with the latter in terms of consumption smoothing and the depletion of assets. We also consider the interaction between past weather-risk exposure and the actual realization of weather shocks to ascertain the extent to which the investment strategies of risk-exposed households ‘pay off’ by buffering them in the face of actual shocks. We use panel data on rice farmers in Viet Nam for the 2008–16 period and match this to annual rainfall data.Our results show that households that are exposed to risk invest more in unproductive assets to avoid the downside risk associated with exposure to flooding. This translates into lower income levels. The investment in these assets does not appear to pay off once actual risks are realized.
KW - Faculty of Social Sciences
KW - risk
KW - rainfall
KW - weather shocks
KW - investment
KW - risk-coping
KW - Viet Nam
M3 - Working paper
T3 - UNU WIDER Working Paper Series
BT - Risk and investment
ER -
ID: 213728673