Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania

Studies of risk and its consequences tend to focus on one risk factor, such as a drought or an economic crisis. Yet 2003 household surveys in rural Kilimanjaro and Ruvuma, two cash-crop-growing regions in Tanzania that experienced a precipitous co...

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Main Authors: Christiaensen, Luc, Hoffmann, Vivian, Sarris, Alexander
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
FAO
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/11/8735778/gauging-welfare-effects-shocks-rural-tanzania
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7592
id okr-10986-7592
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-75922021-04-23T14:02:34Z Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania Christiaensen, Luc Hoffmann, Vivian Sarris, Alexander ABSENTEEISM ACCESS TO CAPITAL ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO IRRIGATION ACCESSIBILITY ADDITIONAL INCOME AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES AGRICULTURAL HOUSEHOLDS AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTIONS ASSET HOLDINGS BANANA TREES BANANAS BANKING SERVICES CALCULATIONS CASH CROPS CASH RESERVES CASH-CROP CASHEW NUTS COFFEE COFFEE CROP COFFEE FARMERS COFFEE GROWERS COFFEE GROWING COFFEE PRICES COFFEE PRODUCTION COFFEE TREES COMMODITIES COMMODITY CONSUMER CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING COVARIATE SHOCKS CRIME CROP CROP FAILURE CROPS CROWDING OUT CULTIVATED LAND CULTIVATION DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS DIVERSIFICATION DROUGHTS EARNINGS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC CRISES ECONOMIC CRISIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENTS EFFECTS OF DROUGHT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES ETHNIC GROUPS EXCHANGE RATE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXTERNAL SHOCK FAMILIES FAMILY MEMBER FAO FARM FARM ENTERPRISE FARM SELF-EMPLOYMENT FARMING FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLD FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS FOOD AID FOOD CONSUMPTION FOOD PRODUCTION FORMAL CREDIT FORMAL EDUCATION FULL ACCESS GENDER HEALTH CARE HEALTH ECONOMICS HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SPENDING HOLISTIC APPROACH HOSPITALIZATION HOUSEHOLD BUDGET HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION HOUSEHOLD DEMOGRAPHICS HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES HOUSEHOLD HEAD HOUSEHOLD HEADS HOUSEHOLD SIZE HOUSEHOLD SURVEY HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS HOUSEHOLD VULNERABILITY HOUSEHOLD WELFARE HUMAN CAPITAL INCOME INCOME GENERATION INCOME SHOCK INSURANCE INSURANCE MARKETS INSURANCE SCHEMES INTERNATIONAL BANK IRRIGATION LANDHOLDING SIZE LANDHOLDINGS LIFE CYCLE LIVESTOCK OWNERSHIP LIVING STANDARDS LOW-INCOME LOWER INCOMES MARGINAL RATE MEDICAL EXPENSES MICRO-FINANCE MICRO-FINANCE INSTITUTIONS MORTALITY POLITICAL ECONOMY POOR POSSESSION POSSESSIONS POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY INCIDENCE POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY PRIMARY EDUCATION PROBABILITY PRODUCTIVE CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY QUALITY OF LIFE QUESTIONNAIRE RATE OF RETURNS RECEIPT REMITTANCE REMITTANCES RISK AVERSION RISK FACTORS RISK SHARING RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL HOUSEHOLD RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL POPULATION SAFETY NET SAFETY NET PROGRAMS SALE SALES SAVINGS SECONDARY EDUCATION SELF-EMPLOYMENT SENIOR SOCIAL CAPITAL SOCIAL PROTECTION SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA TARGETING TOBACCO UNEMPLOYMENT VALUE OF ASSETS VILLAGE VILLAGES WAGE WORKING AGE YIELDS Studies of risk and its consequences tend to focus on one risk factor, such as a drought or an economic crisis. Yet 2003 household surveys in rural Kilimanjaro and Ruvuma, two cash-crop-growing regions in Tanzania that experienced a precipitous coffee price decline around the turn of the millennium, identified health and drought shocks as well as commodity price declines as major risk factors, suggesting the need for a comprehensive approach to analyzing household vulnerability. In fact, most coffee growers, except the smaller ones in Kilimanjaro, weathered the coffee price declines rather well, at least to the point of not being worse off than non-coffee growers. Conversely, improving health conditions and reducing the effect of droughts emerge as critical to reduce vulnerability. One-third of the rural households in Kilimanjaro experienced a drought or health shocks, resulting in an estimated 8 percent welfare loss on average, after using savings and aid. Rainfall is more reliable in Ruvuma, and drought there did not affect welfare. Surprisingly, neither did health shocks, plausibly because of lower medical expenditures given limited health care provisions. 2012-06-08T20:27:48Z 2012-06-08T20:27:48Z 2007-11 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/11/8735778/gauging-welfare-effects-shocks-rural-tanzania http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7592 English Policy Research Working Paper; No. 4406 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Africa Tanzania
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ABSENTEEISM
ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ACCESS TO IRRIGATION
ACCESSIBILITY
ADDITIONAL INCOME
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES
AGRICULTURAL HOUSEHOLDS
AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION
AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTIONS
ASSET HOLDINGS
BANANA TREES
BANANAS
BANKING SERVICES
CALCULATIONS
CASH CROPS
CASH RESERVES
CASH-CROP
CASHEW NUTS
COFFEE
COFFEE CROP
COFFEE FARMERS
COFFEE GROWERS
COFFEE GROWING
COFFEE PRICES
COFFEE PRODUCTION
COFFEE TREES
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
CONSUMER
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING
COVARIATE SHOCKS
CRIME
CROP
CROP FAILURE
CROPS
CROWDING OUT
CULTIVATED LAND
CULTIVATION
DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS
DIVERSIFICATION
DROUGHTS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC CRISES
ECONOMIC CRISIS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENTS
EFFECTS OF DROUGHT
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
ETHNIC GROUPS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXTERNAL SHOCK
FAMILIES
FAMILY MEMBER
FAO
FARM
FARM ENTERPRISE
FARM SELF-EMPLOYMENT
FARMING
FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLD
FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS
FOOD AID
FOOD CONSUMPTION
FOOD PRODUCTION
FORMAL CREDIT
FORMAL EDUCATION
FULL ACCESS
GENDER
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH ECONOMICS
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH SPENDING
HOLISTIC APPROACH
HOSPITALIZATION
HOUSEHOLD BUDGET
HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD DEMOGRAPHICS
HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
HOUSEHOLD HEADS
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
HOUSEHOLD VULNERABILITY
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INCOME GENERATION
INCOME SHOCK
INSURANCE
INSURANCE MARKETS
INSURANCE SCHEMES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
IRRIGATION
LANDHOLDING SIZE
LANDHOLDINGS
LIFE CYCLE
LIVESTOCK OWNERSHIP
LIVING STANDARDS
LOW-INCOME
LOWER INCOMES
MARGINAL RATE
MEDICAL EXPENSES
MICRO-FINANCE
MICRO-FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
MORTALITY
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POOR
POSSESSION
POSSESSIONS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
POVERTY INCIDENCE
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PROBABILITY
PRODUCTIVE CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
PROFITABILITY
QUALITY OF LIFE
QUESTIONNAIRE
RATE OF RETURNS
RECEIPT
REMITTANCE
REMITTANCES
RISK AVERSION
RISK FACTORS
RISK SHARING
RURAL
RURAL AREAS
RURAL HOUSEHOLD
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
RURAL POPULATION
SAFETY NET
SAFETY NET PROGRAMS
SALE
SALES
SAVINGS
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SENIOR
SOCIAL CAPITAL
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
TARGETING
TOBACCO
UNEMPLOYMENT
VALUE OF ASSETS
VILLAGE
VILLAGES
WAGE
WORKING AGE
YIELDS
spellingShingle ABSENTEEISM
ACCESS TO CAPITAL
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ACCESS TO IRRIGATION
ACCESSIBILITY
ADDITIONAL INCOME
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES
AGRICULTURAL HOUSEHOLDS
AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION
AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTIONS
ASSET HOLDINGS
BANANA TREES
BANANAS
BANKING SERVICES
CALCULATIONS
CASH CROPS
CASH RESERVES
CASH-CROP
CASHEW NUTS
COFFEE
COFFEE CROP
COFFEE FARMERS
COFFEE GROWERS
COFFEE GROWING
COFFEE PRICES
COFFEE PRODUCTION
COFFEE TREES
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
CONSUMER
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING
COVARIATE SHOCKS
CRIME
CROP
CROP FAILURE
CROPS
CROWDING OUT
CULTIVATED LAND
CULTIVATION
DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS
DIVERSIFICATION
DROUGHTS
EARNINGS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC CRISES
ECONOMIC CRISIS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENTS
EFFECTS OF DROUGHT
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
ETHNIC GROUPS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXTERNAL SHOCK
FAMILIES
FAMILY MEMBER
FAO
FARM
FARM ENTERPRISE
FARM SELF-EMPLOYMENT
FARMING
FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLD
FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS
FOOD AID
FOOD CONSUMPTION
FOOD PRODUCTION
FORMAL CREDIT
FORMAL EDUCATION
FULL ACCESS
GENDER
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH ECONOMICS
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH SPENDING
HOLISTIC APPROACH
HOSPITALIZATION
HOUSEHOLD BUDGET
HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD DEMOGRAPHICS
HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
HOUSEHOLD HEADS
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
HOUSEHOLD VULNERABILITY
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INCOME GENERATION
INCOME SHOCK
INSURANCE
INSURANCE MARKETS
INSURANCE SCHEMES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
IRRIGATION
LANDHOLDING SIZE
LANDHOLDINGS
LIFE CYCLE
LIVESTOCK OWNERSHIP
LIVING STANDARDS
LOW-INCOME
LOWER INCOMES
MARGINAL RATE
MEDICAL EXPENSES
MICRO-FINANCE
MICRO-FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
MORTALITY
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POOR
POSSESSION
POSSESSIONS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
POVERTY INCIDENCE
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PROBABILITY
PRODUCTIVE CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
PROFITABILITY
QUALITY OF LIFE
QUESTIONNAIRE
RATE OF RETURNS
RECEIPT
REMITTANCE
REMITTANCES
RISK AVERSION
RISK FACTORS
RISK SHARING
RURAL
RURAL AREAS
RURAL HOUSEHOLD
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
RURAL POPULATION
SAFETY NET
SAFETY NET PROGRAMS
SALE
SALES
SAVINGS
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SENIOR
SOCIAL CAPITAL
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
TARGETING
TOBACCO
UNEMPLOYMENT
VALUE OF ASSETS
VILLAGE
VILLAGES
WAGE
WORKING AGE
YIELDS
Christiaensen, Luc
Hoffmann, Vivian
Sarris, Alexander
Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania
geographic_facet Africa
Tanzania
relation Policy Research Working Paper; No. 4406
description Studies of risk and its consequences tend to focus on one risk factor, such as a drought or an economic crisis. Yet 2003 household surveys in rural Kilimanjaro and Ruvuma, two cash-crop-growing regions in Tanzania that experienced a precipitous coffee price decline around the turn of the millennium, identified health and drought shocks as well as commodity price declines as major risk factors, suggesting the need for a comprehensive approach to analyzing household vulnerability. In fact, most coffee growers, except the smaller ones in Kilimanjaro, weathered the coffee price declines rather well, at least to the point of not being worse off than non-coffee growers. Conversely, improving health conditions and reducing the effect of droughts emerge as critical to reduce vulnerability. One-third of the rural households in Kilimanjaro experienced a drought or health shocks, resulting in an estimated 8 percent welfare loss on average, after using savings and aid. Rainfall is more reliable in Ruvuma, and drought there did not affect welfare. Surprisingly, neither did health shocks, plausibly because of lower medical expenditures given limited health care provisions.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Christiaensen, Luc
Hoffmann, Vivian
Sarris, Alexander
author_facet Christiaensen, Luc
Hoffmann, Vivian
Sarris, Alexander
author_sort Christiaensen, Luc
title Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania
title_short Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania
title_full Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania
title_fullStr Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Gauging the Welfare Effects of Shocks in Rural Tanzania
title_sort gauging the welfare effects of shocks in rural tanzania
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/11/8735778/gauging-welfare-effects-shocks-rural-tanzania
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7592
_version_ 1764402568846376960