Migration as an Adaptation Strategy to Weather Variability: An Instrumental Variables Probit Analysis
Abstract
There is solid scientific evidence predicting that a large part of the developing world will suffer a greater incidence of extreme weather events, which may increase the incidence of displacement migration. We draw on the new economics of migration to model migration decisions of smallholder and rain-dependent farm households in rural Ethiopia and investigate both the ex-ante and ex-post impacts of climate variables. Using detailed household survey panel data matched with rainfall data, we show that weather variability - measured by the coeffcient of variation of rainfall - has a strong positive impact on the probability of sending a migrant. This implies that households engage in migration to cope with risk ex-ante. We also find evidence
suggesting that rainfall shocks have ex-post impact on households' likelihood of migration, but
the effect is not statistically significant at the conventional levels. Instrumental variables probit
regression results also show that controlling for endogeneity of income using a credible instrument is important to identify its impact on the decision to send a migrant. Our findings have
important implications for policies aiming to improve the capacity of vulnerable households to
adapt to climate change.
Other description
JEL: O15, Q54, R23
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Date
2016-06Author
Alem, Yonas
Maurel, Mathilde
Millock, Katrin
Keywords
climate change
drought
Ethiopia
household survey
migration
rainfall
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
665
Language
eng