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Empirically based analysis of households coping with unexpected shocks in the central Himalayas

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posted on 2018-09-20, 12:01 authored by Lea Ravnkilde Møller, Carsten Smith-Hall, Henrik Meilby, Santosh Rayamajhi, Lise Byskov Herslund, Helle Overgaard Larsen, Øystein Juul Nielsen, Anja Byg

Climate change may significantly impact the large number of households in developing countries depending on agricultural production, not least through changes in the frequency and/or magnitude of climatic hazards resulting in household income shocks. This paper analyses rural households’ responses to past experiences of and future expectations to substantial and unexpected negative and positive agricultural income shocks. Empirical data is derived from an environmentally-augmented structured household (n = 112) survey in the high mountains of central Nepal. Multinomial logit regression, using data on rural household demographics, assets (agricultural land, livestock), value of other assets such as furniture, bicycles, and agricultural implements, and income sources showed that household coping choices are determined by opportunities to generate cash. We argue that public policies should enhance the ability of rural household to generate cash income, including through environmental products.

Funding

This work was supported by The Consultative Research Committee for Development Research (FFU), a programme committee under the Danish Council for Strategic Research [grant number 104.Dan.8.L.716].

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