Abstract—While research has demonstrated that farm households in developing economies are able to protect consumption from idiosyncratic crop shocks, little evidence shows how this is achieved. This paper examines the extent to which labor markets allow households to shift labor from farm to off-farm employment, and the extent to which such a shift explains the observed lack of correlation between consumption and idiosyncratic crop shocks. The empirical analysis uses a novel measure of the idiosyncratic crop income shock which utilizes information on start-of-season cropping choices to more accurately estimate household expectations of weather. I
Cultivator households in some developing areas use off-farm labor supply as an insurance against cro...
The majority of rural households in Central Asia have strong dependence on farming incomes for their...
Agriculture-based livelihoods in developing countries are often challenged by a multitude of unfores...
This paper tests the hypothesis that agricultural households engage in intermittent wage labor as a ...
This paper tests the hypothesis that agricultural households engage in intermittent wage labor as a ...
The paper studies the way in which labor supply responses enable households to smooth consumption in...
Poor households in rural Bangladesh often face concurring idiosyncratic and aggregate shocks, which ...
This paper investigates the mechanism in which off-farm employment offsets the effect of crop incom...
A sample of Iowa farm couples is used to evaluate whether off-farm labor supply decisions respond to...
Using year long intensive monitoring rural household survey, the study has shown that while covarian...
In this dissertation I consider the relationship between the adoption and use of modern inputs and a...
This paper measures the extent to which farmers are able to use savings and dissavings to smooth con...
A sample of Iowa farm couples is used to evaluate whether off-farm labor supply decisions respond to...
We present new evidence that households are unable to protect themselves from rainfall failure that ...
We offer new conceptual insights into the understanding of occupational choice in uncertain rural en...
Cultivator households in some developing areas use off-farm labor supply as an insurance against cro...
The majority of rural households in Central Asia have strong dependence on farming incomes for their...
Agriculture-based livelihoods in developing countries are often challenged by a multitude of unfores...
This paper tests the hypothesis that agricultural households engage in intermittent wage labor as a ...
This paper tests the hypothesis that agricultural households engage in intermittent wage labor as a ...
The paper studies the way in which labor supply responses enable households to smooth consumption in...
Poor households in rural Bangladesh often face concurring idiosyncratic and aggregate shocks, which ...
This paper investigates the mechanism in which off-farm employment offsets the effect of crop incom...
A sample of Iowa farm couples is used to evaluate whether off-farm labor supply decisions respond to...
Using year long intensive monitoring rural household survey, the study has shown that while covarian...
In this dissertation I consider the relationship between the adoption and use of modern inputs and a...
This paper measures the extent to which farmers are able to use savings and dissavings to smooth con...
A sample of Iowa farm couples is used to evaluate whether off-farm labor supply decisions respond to...
We present new evidence that households are unable to protect themselves from rainfall failure that ...
We offer new conceptual insights into the understanding of occupational choice in uncertain rural en...
Cultivator households in some developing areas use off-farm labor supply as an insurance against cro...
The majority of rural households in Central Asia have strong dependence on farming incomes for their...
Agriculture-based livelihoods in developing countries are often challenged by a multitude of unfores...