Litcius/Paper detail

Climate impacts on nutrition and labor supply disentangled – an analysis for rural areas of Uganda

Chiara Antonelli, Manuela Coromaldi, Shouro Dasgupta, Johannes Emmerling, Soheil Shayegh

2020Environment and Development Economics40 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The entire agricultural supply chain, from crop production to food consumption, is expected to suffer significant damages from climate change. This paper empirically investigates the effects of warming on agricultural labor supply through variation in dietary intake in rural Uganda. We examine labor supply, food consumption, and overall social welfare under various climate change scenarios. First, we combine nationally representative longitudinal survey data with high-resolution climatic data using an instrumental variable approach. Controlling for calorie intake, our study shows that warming has a non-linear impact on agricultural labor supply, with the number of hours worked being optimized at an optimal temperature of 21.3°C. Using these econometric estimates to parametrize an overlapping generations model, we find that under RCP8.5, output per adult decreases by 20 per cent by the end of the century due to the combined effect of climate change on food consumption and labor supply.

Topics & Concepts

EconomicsClimate changeAgricultureConsumption (sociology)WelfareAgricultural economicsFood supplyAgricultural productivityNatural resource economicsPanel dataEnvironmental scienceEconometricsGeographyEcologyArchaeologySociologySocial scienceBiologyMarket economyAgricultural risk and resilienceClimate Change Policy and EconomicsEnergy and Environment Impacts
Climate impacts on nutrition and labor supply disentangled – an analysis for rural areas of Uganda | Litcius