Do Tropical Forests Provide Natural Insurance? The Microeconomics of Non-Timber Forest Product Collection in the Brazilian Amazon
Land Economics2001Vol. 77(4), pp. 595–612
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2001 papers
Abstract
Tropical forests may contribute to the well-being of local people by providing a form of “natural insurance.” We draw on microeconomic theory to conceptualize a model relating agricultural risks to collection of non-timber forest products. Forest collection trips are positively correlated with both agricultural shocks and expected agricultural risks in an event-count model of survey data from the Brazilian Amazon. This suggests that households rely on forests to mitigate agricultural risk. Forest product collection may be less important to households with other consumption-smoothing options, but its importance is not restricted to the poorest households. (JEL Q23)
Related Papers
- → Recognizing the Multiple Reasons for Bushmeat Consumption in Urban Areas: A Necessary Step Toward the Sustainable Use of Wildlife for Food in Central Africa(2011)159 cited
- → Understanding the influence of non-wealth factors in determining bushmeat consumption: Results from four West African countries(2017)62 cited
- → Bushmeat(2017)1 cited
- Evaluation of Wildlife Hunting and Species of Animals Marketed as Bushmeat in Dakka Bali Local Government Area, Taraba State, Nigeria(2014)
- → Preface(2023)