Rural Poverty and Soil Degradation: Some Evidences from a Land Reform Settlement in the Brazilian State of Goiás
Alcido Elenor Wander,
Cleyzer Adrian Cunha,
Maria Izabel dos Santos,
Rodrigo da Silva Souza and
Agostinho Dirceu Didonet
Additional contact information
Alcido Elenor Wander: EMBRAPA
Cleyzer Adrian Cunha: FACE-UFG, Ciências Econômicas
Maria Izabel dos Santos: FACE-UFG, Ciências Econômicas
Rodrigo da Silva Souza: FACE-UFG, Ciências Econômicas
Agostinho Dirceu Didonet: FACE-UFG, Ciências Econômicas
No 10, Working papers - Textos para Discussao do Curso de Ciencias Economicas da UFG from Curso de Ciencias Economicas da Universidade Federal de Goias - FACE
Abstract:
In different continents there is a paradigm of a vicious circle of poverty and natural resource degradation. However, there are cases where this may not be true. Thus, the central objective of this study was to analyze the relationship between rural poverty and soil degradation in land reform settlement in the Brazilian Center West region. Therefore, farmers were interviewed and data was analyzed through an econometric analysis of the probit model. Our hypothesis was that environmental degradation can worse the rural poverty in the farm enterprises. The binary and dependent variable was the adoption of natural resource saving practices like agroforestry systems and crop rotation. As independent variables that explain the probability to occur (y=1 or y=0) we considered the total (farm and nonfarm) income, the total herd size of cattle, the land ownership and the education level of farmers (years of school visit). We expected positive signs for all estimated coefficients in the probit model, i.e. the higher the values of independent variables the more likely the conservation practices to be adopted. The estimated model was significant at 5% level. The independent variables explain 50.41% of the variation in the probability of adoption of crop rotation in the farms. Three of the independent variables had negative signs: total income, herd size and land ownership, meaning that increasing the values of those variables decrease the probability of the adoption of conservation practices. This result evidences an opposite relationship between rural poverty and environmental degradation. On the other side, the education level of farmers was positively related to the likeness of adoption of soil conservation practices. Thus, there was no relationship between rural poverty and soil degradation. However, there is a clear positive relationship between the education level of farmers and the likeness of adoption of natural resource conservation practices.
Keywords: soil erosion; land reform; crop rotation; agroforestry (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Q50 Q51 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 7 pages
Date: 2009-11
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr
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https://files.cercomp.ufg.br/weby/up/118/o/TD_010.pdf First version, 2009 (application/pdf)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ufb:wpaper:010
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