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Augustin TAPSOBA (TSE) – "The Power of Markets: Impact of Desert Locust Invasions on Child Health"

December 15, 2020 @ 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
The Microeconometrics Seminar: Every Tuesday
Time: 03:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Date: 15th of December 2020
by visio
Augustin TAPSOBA (TSE) – “The Power of Markets: Impact of Desert Locust Invasions on Child Health”

Abstract: This paper investigates the consequences of a locust plague that occurred in Mali in 2004. We provide evidence of substantial crop market effects that explain the space-time pattern of the estimated impact of this shock. We argue first that the plague has affected households in Mali through two channels: first, a speculative price effect that kicked in during the plague itself, followed by a local crop failure effect. We find that, in terms of health setbacks, children exposed in utero only to the speculative price effect suffered as much as those exposed to the actual crop failure effect. Once we account for the impact on local crop prices, the estimated speculative effect vanishes, whereas the crop failure effect persists. Children born in isolated areas suffer more from the crop failure effect. Our results suggest that addressing local market reactions to this type of agricultural shocks is crucial for policy design. With Bruno Conte, Lavinia Piemontese.

 
Organizers:

Benoît SCHMUTZ (Laboratoire de Microéconométrie-CREST)
Anthony STRITTMATTER (Laboratoire de Microéconométrie-CREST)
Sponsors:
CREST
 

The Microeconometrics Seminar: Every Tuesday
Time: 03:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Date: 15th of December 2020
by visio
Augustin TAPSOBA (TSE) – “The Power of Markets: Impact of Desert Locust Invasions on Child Health”

Abstract: This paper investigates the consequences of a locust plague that occurred in Mali in 2004. We provide evidence of substantial crop market effects that explain the space-time pattern of the estimated impact of this shock. We argue first that the plague has affected households in Mali through two channels: first, a speculative price effect that kicked in during the plague itself, followed by a local crop failure effect. We find that, in terms of health setbacks, children exposed in utero only to the speculative price effect suffered as much as those exposed to the actual crop failure effect. Once we account for the impact on local crop prices, the estimated speculative effect vanishes, whereas the crop failure effect persists. Children born in isolated areas suffer more from the crop failure effect. Our results suggest that addressing local market reactions to this type of agricultural shocks is crucial for policy design. With Bruno Conte, Lavinia Piemontese.

 
Organizers:

Benoît SCHMUTZ (Laboratoire de Microéconométrie-CREST)
Anthony STRITTMATTER (Laboratoire de Microéconométrie-CREST)
Sponsors:
CREST