Risk and Rainfall: Specification Sensitivity in Estimating Smallholder Risk Preferences
Author
Branham, Reece ErikaIssue Date
2025Advisor
Josephson, AnnaMichler, Jeffrey D.
Metadata
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The University of Arizona.Rights
Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction, presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.Abstract
Rainfall variability in Sub-Saharan Africa creates significant production risks for subsistencefarmers who rely on rainfed agriculture. Weather shocks can alter farmers’ risk preferences, potentially influencing their decision to adopt adaptation strategies. We employ a moments- based approach (Antle, 1983, 1987) to estimate risk aversion among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia, Malawi, and Nigeria in response to weather shocks. Using this framework, we esti- mate Arrow-Pratt and downside risk coefficients across more than 200 model specifications, incorporating various rainfall and rainfall shock metrics derived from six remote sensing weather products. Our findings reveal that estimates of farmers’ risk preferences are highly sensitive to the choice of weather product, while risk preferences are relatively insensitive to different weather shocks. This underscores how data source and model specification choices critically shape risk preference estimates, highlighting key limitations in current empirical methods.Type
textElectronic Thesis
Degree Name
M.S.Degree Level
mastersDegree Program
Graduate CollegeAgricultural & Resource Economics