A Ricardian Analysis of the Distribution of Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture Across Agro-Ecological Zones in Africa

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
A Ricardian Analysis of the Distribution of Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture Across Agro-Ecological Zones in Africa
Abstract
This paper examines the distribution of climate change impacts across the 16 agro-ecological zones in Africa using data from the Food and Agriculture Organization combined economic survey data from a Global Environment Facility/World Bank project. Net revenue per hectare of cropland is regressed on a set of climate, soil, and socio-economic variables using different econometric specifications with and without country fixed effects. Country fixed effects slightly reduce predicted future climate related damage to agriculture. With a mild climate scenario, African farmers gain income from climate change; a more severe scenario, they lose income. Some locations are more affected than others. The analysis of agro-ecological zones implies that the effects of climate change will vary across Africa. For example, currently productive areas such as dry/moist savannah are more vulnerable to climate change while currently less productive agricultural zones such as humid forest or sub-humid zones become more productive in the future. The agro-ecological zone classification can help explain the variation of impacts across the landscape.
Publication
Social Science Research Network
Pages
-
Date
2008-04-01
ISSN
1556-5068
Call Number
openalex: W3122458275
Extra
openalex: W3122458275 mag: 3122458275
Citation
Seo, S. N., Mendelsohn, R., Dinar, A., Hassan, R. M., & Kurukulasuriya, P. (2008). A Ricardian Analysis of the Distribution of Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture Across Agro-Ecological Zones in Africa. Social Science Research Network. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1149102