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สถาบันวิจัยเศรษฐกิจป๋วย อึ๊งภากรณ์
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Call for Papers: PIER Research Workshop 2025
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27 July 2016
20161469577600000
No. 038

Natural Disasters, Preferences, and Behaviors: Evidence from the 2011 Mega Flood in Cambodia

Abstract

This paper studies the impacts of the 2011 mega flood on preferences, subjective expectations, and behavioral choices among Cambodian rice-farming households. We find flood victims to have larger risk aversion and altruism, and lower impatience and trust of friends and local governments. The disaster also induced flooded households to adjust upward their subjective expectations of future floods and of natural resources as a safety net. Mediating (partially if not all) through these changes in preferences and expectations, the 2011 flood also affected households' behavioral choices, some of which could further result in long-term economic development and resilience to future floods. We find flooded households to have lower productive investment, to substitute away social insurance by increasing self-insurance and demand for market-based instruments, and more importantly, to increase the use of natural resources as insurance. These findings shed light on the design of incentive-compatible safety nets and development interventions.

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JEL: D1O12O17
Tags: bank loansnatural disasterspreferencessubjective expectationhousehold behaviors
The views expressed in this workshop do not necessarily reflect the views of the Puey Ungphakorn Institute for Economic Research or the Bank of Thailand.
Sommarat Chantarat
Sommarat Chantarat
Puey Ungphakorn Institute for Economic Research
Sothea Oum
Sothea Oum
Krislert Samphantharak
Krislert Samphantharak
University of California San Diego
Vathana Sann
Vathana Sann

Puey Ungphakorn Institute for Economic Research

273 Samsen Rd, Phra Nakhon, Bangkok 10200

Phone: 0-2283-6066

Email: pier@bot.or.th

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