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Climate Change and Mitigation: Is Agriculture the Main Channel?

Author

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  • Falco, Chiara
  • Galeotti, Marzio
  • Olper, Alessandro

Abstract

Migration and climate change are two of the most important challenges the world currently faces. They are connected as climate change may stimulate or hinder migration. One of the sectors strongly affected by climate change is agriculture, which is the source of income for most of the world’s poor. Climate change may affect agricultural productivity and hence migration because of its impact on average temperatures and rainfall and because it increases the frequency and intensity of weather shocks. In this paper we use data on 108 countries from 1960 to 2010 to analyze the relationship between weather variation, changes in agricultural productivity and international migration. We find that negative shocks to agricultural productivity caused by temperature fluctuations significantly increase emigration from developing countries, an especially strong impact in poor countries but less so in middle income countries. These results are robust to the definitions of the poor country sample, and to several checks and alternative explanations suggested by the literature. Importantly, our results point to a causal interpretation of the agricultural channel to explain the climate change-migration nexus.

Suggested Citation

  • Falco, Chiara & Galeotti, Marzio & Olper, Alessandro, 2019. "Climate Change and Mitigation: Is Agriculture the Main Channel?," 2019: Trading for Good - Agricultural Trade in the Context of Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation... Symposium, June 23-25, 2019, Seville, Spain 312534, International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium.
  • Handle: RePEc:ags:iat19e:312534
    DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.312534
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    Cited by:

    1. Etienne Inedit Blaise Tsomb Tsomb & Mermoz Homer III Nsoga Nsoga & Cyrille Dominick Bitting, 2024. "Climate change vulnerability and conflicts in Africa: evidence from the migrations channel," Environment, Development and Sustainability: A Multidisciplinary Approach to the Theory and Practice of Sustainable Development, Springer, vol. 26(7), pages 18811-18854, July.

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