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Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape

The poverty trap hypothesis postulates that very low income individuals may be trapped in poverty because severe constraints give rise to behaviour that limits their ability to take up and benefit from new investments. Furthermore, the theory suggests that insurance and credit can serve as effective...

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Main Author: Jumare, Hafsah
Other Authors: Visser, Martine
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Social Anthropology 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Jumare, Hafsah
author2 Visser, Martine
author_browse Jumare, Hafsah
Visser, Martine
author_facet Visser, Martine
Jumare, Hafsah
author_sort Jumare, Hafsah
collection Thesis
description The poverty trap hypothesis postulates that very low income individuals may be trapped in poverty because severe constraints give rise to behaviour that limits their ability to take up and benefit from new investments. Furthermore, the theory suggests that insurance and credit can serve as effective tools in counteracting the mechanisms that create this type of persistent poverty. In this study, using data obtained from two separate samples of farmers in the Western Cape, we explore the validity of this hypothesis in a South African context. One sample consists of organic farmers from Cape Town whilst the other comprises of conventional farmers from the Matzikama Municipality. We elicit behavioural traits; more specifically risk preferences, using lottery type experiments with real money at stake. Using a series of logit regressions we look at the relationship between these preferences i.e. risk aversion, loss aversion and nonlinear probability weighting and actual uptake of farm technology in both samples. Using the Matzikama sample, we then apply the estimates to uptake in an experimental setting where insurance and credit are provided. The experimental study allows us to test for both absolute and path dependent effects by examining both the levels, using a multinomial logit model, and the timing, using a cox proportional hazard model, of uptake. The results from the real life data show that the effects of the risk preferences tend to differ depending on the type of technology, and this is true for both samples. One consistent finding from both the real life and experimental uptake data is that the farmers who live in households that have below average relative income levels are less likely to take up technology; even with insurance and loans being made available in the experiment. This finding is unexpected given that all the farmers face the same objective risk levels and do not have their real life income at stake in the experiment. Our results show that the availability of insurance improves uptake in the overall sample and can serve as effective tools in reducing poverty. However, contrary to the poverty trap hypotheses, little evidence is found to suggest that the insurance contract in the study sufficiently serves as a device to counteract the risk preferences that are linked to low technology uptake. This finding is evident when considering both absolute uptake and the timing of uptake. Therefore, the results on the effects of insurance and credit on technology uptake, given risk preference and relative income position, may imply that low income farmers in South Africa are not only constrained by behaviour that is prompted by monetary or risk factors but also other behavioural or psychological components e.g. the feeling of hopelessness that stems from persisting conditions of poverty; however, this requires further investigation.
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20686 Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape Jumare, Hafsah Visser, Martine Social Science in Economics The poverty trap hypothesis postulates that very low income individuals may be trapped in poverty because severe constraints give rise to behaviour that limits their ability to take up and benefit from new investments. Furthermore, the theory suggests that insurance and credit can serve as effective tools in counteracting the mechanisms that create this type of persistent poverty. In this study, using data obtained from two separate samples of farmers in the Western Cape, we explore the validity of this hypothesis in a South African context. One sample consists of organic farmers from Cape Town whilst the other comprises of conventional farmers from the Matzikama Municipality. We elicit behavioural traits; more specifically risk preferences, using lottery type experiments with real money at stake. Using a series of logit regressions we look at the relationship between these preferences i.e. risk aversion, loss aversion and nonlinear probability weighting and actual uptake of farm technology in both samples. Using the Matzikama sample, we then apply the estimates to uptake in an experimental setting where insurance and credit are provided. The experimental study allows us to test for both absolute and path dependent effects by examining both the levels, using a multinomial logit model, and the timing, using a cox proportional hazard model, of uptake. The results from the real life data show that the effects of the risk preferences tend to differ depending on the type of technology, and this is true for both samples. One consistent finding from both the real life and experimental uptake data is that the farmers who live in households that have below average relative income levels are less likely to take up technology; even with insurance and loans being made available in the experiment. This finding is unexpected given that all the farmers face the same objective risk levels and do not have their real life income at stake in the experiment. Our results show that the availability of insurance improves uptake in the overall sample and can serve as effective tools in reducing poverty. However, contrary to the poverty trap hypotheses, little evidence is found to suggest that the insurance contract in the study sufficiently serves as a device to counteract the risk preferences that are linked to low technology uptake. This finding is evident when considering both absolute uptake and the timing of uptake. Therefore, the results on the effects of insurance and credit on technology uptake, given risk preference and relative income position, may imply that low income farmers in South Africa are not only constrained by behaviour that is prompted by monetary or risk factors but also other behavioural or psychological components e.g. the feeling of hopelessness that stems from persisting conditions of poverty; however, this requires further investigation. 2016-07-25T11:28:07Z 2016-07-25T11:28:07Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20686 eng application/pdf Social Anthropology Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Social Science in Economics
Jumare, Hafsah
Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape
title_full Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape
title_fullStr Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape
title_full_unstemmed Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape
title_short Risk preferences and the poverty trap : a look at technology uptake amongst small-scale farmers in the Western Cape
title_sort risk preferences and the poverty trap a look at technology uptake amongst small scale farmers in the western cape
topic Social Science in Economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20686
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