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U.S. Interstate Trade Will Mitigate the Negative Impact of Climate Change on Crop Profit.

Authors :
Dall'Erba, Sandy
Chen, Zhangliang
Nava, Noé J.
Source :
American Journal of Agricultural Economics; Oct2021, Vol. 103 Issue 5, p1720-1741, 22p, 5 Charts, 4 Graphs, 2 Maps
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

According to the current Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change report, climate change will increase the probability of occurrence of droughts in some areas. Recent contributions at the international level indicate that trade is expected to act as an efficient tool to mitigate the adverse effect of future climate conditions on agriculture. However, no contribution has focused on the similar capacity of trade within any country yet. The U.S. is an obvious choice given that many climate impact studies focus on its agriculture and around 90% of the U.S. crop trade is domestic. Combining a recent state‐to‐state trade flow dataset with detailed drought records at a fine spatial and temporal resolution, this paper highlights first that trade increases as the destination state experiences more drought and inversely in the origin state. As a result, crop growers' profits depend on both local and trade partners' weather conditions. Projections based on future weather data convert the crop grower's expected loss without trade into expected profit. As such, this paper challenges the estimates of the current climate impact literature and concludes that trade is expected to act as a $14.5 billion mitigation tool in the near future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029092
Volume :
103
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
American Journal of Agricultural Economics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152312068
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ajae.12204