Farmers’ risk preferences and their climate change adaptation strategies in the Yongqiao District, China

•Farmers’ risk attitudes play an important role in agricultural production decisions.•Most farmers in the study area were aware of climate change.•The representative subject was risk averse and women were more risk averse.•The factors influencing farmers’ adoption of different adaptation strategies...

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Published in:Land use policy Vol. 47; pp. 365 - 372
Main Authors: Jianjun, Jin, Yiwei, Gao, Xiaomin, Wang, Nam, Pham Khanh
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 01-09-2015
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Summary:•Farmers’ risk attitudes play an important role in agricultural production decisions.•Most farmers in the study area were aware of climate change.•The representative subject was risk averse and women were more risk averse.•The factors influencing farmers’ adoption of different adaptation strategies varied. Farmers’ risk preferences play an important role in agricultural production decisions. This study characterizes risk preferences among farmers in Yongqiao and determines how these risk preferences are related to their choices regarding climate change adaptation strategies. We find that most farmers in the study area were aware of climate change. They were taking measures to protect their livelihoods against perceived changes to the local climate. The risk experiment result shows that the representative subject was risk averse, and women were more risk averse than men. The relationships between farmers’ risk preferences and different climate change adaptation choices were different. Farmers’ risk aversion was negatively and significantly related with adaptation strategies on planting new crop varieties and adopting new technology, but it had a significantly positive effect on purchasing weather index crop insurance. The results also indicate that the level of education, farming experience, farm size, household income and perception of climate change impacts influence farmers’ adaptation decisions.
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content type line 23
ISSN:0264-8377
1873-5754
DOI:10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.04.028