Natural disasters trigger large inequalities between affected households and the rest of the community. The extent to which villages compensate for these shocks allegedly depends on the pressure imposed by the group of needy families. I model two major threats to redistribution - (i) the emergence of acoalition of winners willing to shy away from redistributing to their peers and (ii) the initial fractionalization of the community. Matching data on a wave of tropical typhoons with a panel household survey in Vietnam, I find less redistribution in villages where needy families are in the minority. Whereas 17 cents on average are covered through informal transfers for a relative income loss of $1, access to liquidity falls below 10 cents when...
A summary of EEPSEA Research Report No. 2011-RR10: 'Social capital, livelihood diversification and h...
Social networks play a vital role in rural China. Households are not isolated; they are connected vi...
Natural disasters are expected exacerbate poverty and inequality, but little evidence exists to supp...
Natural disasters trigger large inequalities between affected households and the rest of the communi...
Natural disasters trigger large inequalities between affected households and the rest of the communi...
International audienceThe study usescommune fixed-effect regressions to estimate the effect of natur...
How disaster aid is allocated within poor villages is little understood. This paper examines risk-sh...
This thesis investigates channels to improve individual/household disaster resilience and the causal...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the impact of disaster rehabilitation interventions...
We analyze how internal labor migration facilitates shock coping in rural economies. Employing high-...
This paper illustrates the sharp contrast in welfare impacts between the rich and the poor caused by...
We use panel data from a household survey conducted in Vietnam to analyze the effectiveness of infor...
This paper clarifies the influence of natural disasters on household income and relations with pover...
We examine how households protected their livelihood against an unexpected negative shock caused by ...
This paper uses a unique household data set collected in Vietnam to empirically test the necessary c...
A summary of EEPSEA Research Report No. 2011-RR10: 'Social capital, livelihood diversification and h...
Social networks play a vital role in rural China. Households are not isolated; they are connected vi...
Natural disasters are expected exacerbate poverty and inequality, but little evidence exists to supp...
Natural disasters trigger large inequalities between affected households and the rest of the communi...
Natural disasters trigger large inequalities between affected households and the rest of the communi...
International audienceThe study usescommune fixed-effect regressions to estimate the effect of natur...
How disaster aid is allocated within poor villages is little understood. This paper examines risk-sh...
This thesis investigates channels to improve individual/household disaster resilience and the causal...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the impact of disaster rehabilitation interventions...
We analyze how internal labor migration facilitates shock coping in rural economies. Employing high-...
This paper illustrates the sharp contrast in welfare impacts between the rich and the poor caused by...
We use panel data from a household survey conducted in Vietnam to analyze the effectiveness of infor...
This paper clarifies the influence of natural disasters on household income and relations with pover...
We examine how households protected their livelihood against an unexpected negative shock caused by ...
This paper uses a unique household data set collected in Vietnam to empirically test the necessary c...
A summary of EEPSEA Research Report No. 2011-RR10: 'Social capital, livelihood diversification and h...
Social networks play a vital role in rural China. Households are not isolated; they are connected vi...
Natural disasters are expected exacerbate poverty and inequality, but little evidence exists to supp...