The Effect of Risk, Ambiguity, and Coordination on Farmers’ Adaptation to Climate Change: A Framed Field Experiment

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Date

Sept. 21, 2009

Authors

Francisco Alpízar, Fredrik Carlsson, and Maria Naranjo

Publication

Working Paper

Reading time

1 minute
The risk of losing income and productive means due to adverse weather can differ significantly among farmers sharing a productive landscape and is, of course, hard to estimate or even “guesstimate” empirically. Moreover, the costs associated with investments in adaptation to climate are likely to exhibit economies of scope. We explore the implications of these characteristics on Costa Rican coffee farmers’ decisions to adapt to climate change, using a framed field experiment. Despite having a baseline of high levels of risk aversion, we still found that farmers more frequently chose the safe options when the setting is characterized by unknown risk (that is, poor or unreliable risk information). Second, we found that farmers, to a large extent, coordinated their decisions to secure a lower adaptation cost and that communication among farmers strongly facilitated coordination.

Authors

Francisco Alpízar

Fredrik Carlsson

Maria Naranjo

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