2017
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3077684
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Climate Change and Indian Agriculture: Impacts on Crop Yield

Abstract: This paper reviews the extant literature on the impacts of climate change on agriculture. We first discuss various methodologies used to study climatic impacts on crop yield. We then present a brief survey of studies from across the globe followed by a discussion on India-specific research. The empirical evidence on the effects of climate change on agriculture has been mixed: while some studies find evidence of adverse impacts others report evidence of positive effects. Applying nonparametric median regression… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…While there exist significant prior work applying RA in India (Dinar et al, 1998;Mishra and Sahu, 2014;Singh et al, 2014;Mandal and Nath, 2017;Birthal et al, 2014), the role of confidence in institutional arrangements, or confidence in organizations that regulate, implement, and protect the arrangements, has been largely overlooked, especially, in the critical context of farm rents. This analysis addresses this gap in the literature, by focusing on the argument, that the welfare of farming communities in low-income or marginal land settings depends largely on the credibility of such organizations (associated with agriculture, justice, and credit).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While there exist significant prior work applying RA in India (Dinar et al, 1998;Mishra and Sahu, 2014;Singh et al, 2014;Mandal and Nath, 2017;Birthal et al, 2014), the role of confidence in institutional arrangements, or confidence in organizations that regulate, implement, and protect the arrangements, has been largely overlooked, especially, in the critical context of farm rents. This analysis addresses this gap in the literature, by focusing on the argument, that the welfare of farming communities in low-income or marginal land settings depends largely on the credibility of such organizations (associated with agriculture, justice, and credit).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%