Estimating US farmers' speed of climate change adaptation: the case of subsurface tile drainage

IF 1.5 Q3 AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY
Haden Comstock, Nathan DeLay
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Abstract

Purpose Climate change is expected to cause larger and more frequent precipitation events in key agricultural regions of the United States, damaging crops and soils. Subsurface tile drainage is an important technology for mitigating the risks of a wetter climate in crop production. In this study, the authors examine how quickly farmers adapt to increased precipitation by investing in drainage technology. Design/methodology/approach Using farm-level data from the 2018 Agricultural Resource Management Survey (ARMS) of soybean producers, the authors construct a drainage adoption timeline based on when the operator began farming their land and when tile drainage was installed, if at all. The authors examine both the initial investment decision and the speed with which drainage is installed by adopters. A Heckman-style Poisson regression is used to model the count nature of adoption speed (measured in years taken to install tile drainage) and to correct for potential sample-selection bias. Findings The authors find that local precipitation is not a significant determinant of the drainage investment decision but may be highly influential in the timing of adoption among drainage users. Farms exposed to crop-damaging levels of precipitation install tile drainage faster than those with low to moderate levels of rainfall. Estimates of farm adaptation speeds are heterogeneous across farm and operator characteristics, most notably land tenure status. Originality/value Understanding how US farmers adapt to extreme weather through technology adoption is key to predicting the long-term impacts of climate change on America's food system. This study extends the existing climate adaptation literature by focusing on the speed of adoption of an important and increasingly common climate-mitigating technology – subsurface tile drainage.
估算美国农民适应气候变化的速度:以地砖排水为例
气候变化预计将在美国主要农业地区造成更大、更频繁的降水事件,破坏农作物和土壤。地下排水是减轻作物生产中潮湿气候风险的一项重要技术。在这项研究中,作者研究了农民通过投资排水技术来适应降水增加的速度。利用2018年大豆生产者农业资源管理调查(ARMS)的农场级数据,作者根据经营者开始耕种土地的时间和安装瓦片排水的时间(如果有的话)构建了排水采用时间表。作者考察了最初的投资决策和采用者安装排水系统的速度。赫克曼式泊松回归用于模拟采用速度的计数性质(以安装瓷砖排水系统的年数衡量),并纠正潜在的样本选择偏差。作者发现,当地降水不是排水投资决策的重要决定因素,但可能对排水用户采用的时机有很大影响。暴露在对农作物有害的降雨水平下的农场比那些低到中等降雨水平的农场安装瓷砖排水系统的速度更快。对农场适应速度的估计因农场和经营者特征而异,最明显的是土地权属状况。了解美国农民如何通过采用技术来适应极端天气,是预测气候变化对美国粮食系统长期影响的关键。本研究扩展了现有的气候适应文献,重点关注了一项重要且日益普遍的气候缓解技术——地下瓦排水的采用速度。
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来源期刊
Agricultural Finance Review
Agricultural Finance Review AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
18.80%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Agricultural Finance Review provides a rigorous forum for the publication of theory and empirical work related solely to issues in agricultural and agribusiness finance. Contributions come from academic and industry experts across the world and address a wide range of topics including: Agricultural finance, Agricultural policy related to agricultural finance and risk issues, Agricultural lending and credit issues, Farm credit, Businesses and financial risks affecting agriculture and agribusiness, Agricultural policies affecting farm or agribusiness risks and profitability, Risk management strategies including the use of futures and options, Rural credit in developing economies, Microfinance and microcredit applied to agriculture and rural development, Financial efficiency, Agriculture insurance and reinsurance. Agricultural Finance Review is committed to research addressing (1) factors affecting or influencing the financing of agriculture and agribusiness in both developed and developing nations; (2) the broadest aspect of risk assessment and risk management strategies affecting agriculture; and (3) government policies affecting farm profitability, liquidity, and access to credit.
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