Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia

While the measurement and determinants of poverty have been widely studied, vulnerability, or the threat of future poverty, has been more difficult to investigate due to data paucity. We combine nationally representative household data with objective drought and price information to quantify and investigate causes of vulnerability to poverty in Ethiopia. Previous estimates have relied on self-reported shocks and variation in outcomes within a survey, which is inadequate for shocks such as weather and prices that vary more across time than space. We used historical distributions of climate and price shocks in each district to simulate the probable distribution of future consumption for individual households and use these quantify vulnerability to poverty. We find that many Ethiopians are unable to protect their consumption against lack of rainfall and sudden increases in food prices. A moderate drought causes a 9% reduction in consumption for many rural households and recent high inflation has caused a 14% reduction in the consumption of uneducated households in urban areas. We also find that the vulnerability of rural households is considerably higher than that of urban households, despite realized poverty rates being fairly similar. This reflects the fact that the household survey in 2011 was conducted during a year of good rainfall but rapid food price inflation. The results highlight the need for caution in using a snapshot of poverty to target programs, as underlying rates of vulnerability can be quite different from the poverty rate captured at one point in time. The results also suggest that significant welfare gains can be made from risk management in both rural and urban areas.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hill, Ruth Vargas, Porter, Catherine
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Published: Elsevier 2017-08
Subjects:VULNERABILITY, POVERTY, DROUGHT, INFLATION, FOOD PRICES, FOOD SECURITY,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29251
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spelling dig-okr-10986292512021-05-25T10:54:43Z Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia Hill, Ruth Vargas Porter, Catherine VULNERABILITY POVERTY DROUGHT INFLATION FOOD PRICES FOOD SECURITY While the measurement and determinants of poverty have been widely studied, vulnerability, or the threat of future poverty, has been more difficult to investigate due to data paucity. We combine nationally representative household data with objective drought and price information to quantify and investigate causes of vulnerability to poverty in Ethiopia. Previous estimates have relied on self-reported shocks and variation in outcomes within a survey, which is inadequate for shocks such as weather and prices that vary more across time than space. We used historical distributions of climate and price shocks in each district to simulate the probable distribution of future consumption for individual households and use these quantify vulnerability to poverty. We find that many Ethiopians are unable to protect their consumption against lack of rainfall and sudden increases in food prices. A moderate drought causes a 9% reduction in consumption for many rural households and recent high inflation has caused a 14% reduction in the consumption of uneducated households in urban areas. We also find that the vulnerability of rural households is considerably higher than that of urban households, despite realized poverty rates being fairly similar. This reflects the fact that the household survey in 2011 was conducted during a year of good rainfall but rapid food price inflation. The results highlight the need for caution in using a snapshot of poverty to target programs, as underlying rates of vulnerability can be quite different from the poverty rate captured at one point in time. The results also suggest that significant welfare gains can be made from risk management in both rural and urban areas. 2018-01-29T19:17:31Z 2018-01-29T19:17:31Z 2017-08 Journal Article World Development 0305-750X http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29251 CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Elsevier Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research Africa Ethiopia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
topic VULNERABILITY
POVERTY
DROUGHT
INFLATION
FOOD PRICES
FOOD SECURITY
VULNERABILITY
POVERTY
DROUGHT
INFLATION
FOOD PRICES
FOOD SECURITY
spellingShingle VULNERABILITY
POVERTY
DROUGHT
INFLATION
FOOD PRICES
FOOD SECURITY
VULNERABILITY
POVERTY
DROUGHT
INFLATION
FOOD PRICES
FOOD SECURITY
Hill, Ruth Vargas
Porter, Catherine
Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia
description While the measurement and determinants of poverty have been widely studied, vulnerability, or the threat of future poverty, has been more difficult to investigate due to data paucity. We combine nationally representative household data with objective drought and price information to quantify and investigate causes of vulnerability to poverty in Ethiopia. Previous estimates have relied on self-reported shocks and variation in outcomes within a survey, which is inadequate for shocks such as weather and prices that vary more across time than space. We used historical distributions of climate and price shocks in each district to simulate the probable distribution of future consumption for individual households and use these quantify vulnerability to poverty. We find that many Ethiopians are unable to protect their consumption against lack of rainfall and sudden increases in food prices. A moderate drought causes a 9% reduction in consumption for many rural households and recent high inflation has caused a 14% reduction in the consumption of uneducated households in urban areas. We also find that the vulnerability of rural households is considerably higher than that of urban households, despite realized poverty rates being fairly similar. This reflects the fact that the household survey in 2011 was conducted during a year of good rainfall but rapid food price inflation. The results highlight the need for caution in using a snapshot of poverty to target programs, as underlying rates of vulnerability can be quite different from the poverty rate captured at one point in time. The results also suggest that significant welfare gains can be made from risk management in both rural and urban areas.
format Journal Article
topic_facet VULNERABILITY
POVERTY
DROUGHT
INFLATION
FOOD PRICES
FOOD SECURITY
author Hill, Ruth Vargas
Porter, Catherine
author_facet Hill, Ruth Vargas
Porter, Catherine
author_sort Hill, Ruth Vargas
title Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia
title_short Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia
title_full Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia
title_fullStr Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Vulnerability to Drought and Food Price Shocks : Evidence from Ethiopia
title_sort vulnerability to drought and food price shocks : evidence from ethiopia
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2017-08
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29251
work_keys_str_mv AT hillruthvargas vulnerabilitytodroughtandfoodpriceshocksevidencefromethiopia
AT portercatherine vulnerabilitytodroughtandfoodpriceshocksevidencefromethiopia
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