Why Farmers Sometimes Love Risks: Evidence from India
Annemie Maertens,
Amalavoyal Chari and
David Just
Economic Development and Cultural Change, 2014, vol. 62, issue 2, 239 - 274
Abstract:
Using a unique data set collected among farmers in India's semiarid tropics, we document the surprising prevalence of risk-taking behavior in the face of realistically framed high-stakes gambles. We hypothesize that this apparently anomalous behavior is due to a combination of credit constraints and nonconvexities in production. In particular, the high-stakes nature of the gambles creates the potential for a farmer to undertake a productive investment that would normally be unaffordable and thereby move to a permanently higher level of income. We show that the degree to which farmers are willing to accept risk in return for this opportunity appears to relate in an intuitive way to their current agricultural production technology as well as the demographic composition of their household.
Date: 2014
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Working Paper: Why Farmers Sometimes Love Risks Evidence from India (2011) 
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