When the Rain Stops Falling

This paper investigates the effects of severe drought shocks on Tunisia’s agriculture sector during 2000–19. Using labor force surveys aligned with granular weather data, it calculates the Standardized Potential Evapotranspiration Index to detect moderate-to-severe drought shocks at the governorate level and frames the analysis in a staggered difference-in-differences setting. The findings show that shocked areas experience a drop of 7.4 to 10.6 percentage points in agricultural employment with respect the untreated or not-yet-treated governorates. There is a contemporaneous opposite dynamic in the employment rate of low-skill and less climate-sensitive sectors, as well as a modest and transient increase in unemployment. The effects are largely heterogeneous across groups of workers, with very young individuals, women, and low-educated workers paying the highest toll.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alfani, Federica, Pallante, Giacomo, Palma, Alessandro, Talhaoui, Abdelkader
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2024-05-07
Subjects:DROUGHT, AGRICULTURE, EMPLOYMENT, GENDER GAP, TUNISIA, CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION, SDG 6, ZERO HUNGER, SDG 2, GENDER EQUALITY, SDG 5, DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH, SDG 8,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099212205072411678/IDU17a7c9a48121f714d881aa161861bb79f46e4
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41514
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:This paper investigates the effects of severe drought shocks on Tunisia’s agriculture sector during 2000–19. Using labor force surveys aligned with granular weather data, it calculates the Standardized Potential Evapotranspiration Index to detect moderate-to-severe drought shocks at the governorate level and frames the analysis in a staggered difference-in-differences setting. The findings show that shocked areas experience a drop of 7.4 to 10.6 percentage points in agricultural employment with respect the untreated or not-yet-treated governorates. There is a contemporaneous opposite dynamic in the employment rate of low-skill and less climate-sensitive sectors, as well as a modest and transient increase in unemployment. The effects are largely heterogeneous across groups of workers, with very young individuals, women, and low-educated workers paying the highest toll.