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Title
Seasonality, precautionary savings and health uncertainty: Evidence from farm households in Central Kenya |
Full text
http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/49g0s6x2 |
Date
2009 |
Author(s)
Ndirangu, Lydia; Burger, Kees; Moll, Hank A.J.; Kuyvenhoven, Arie |
Abstract
The high prevalence of risks in low income economies implies that people's ability to manage uncertainty is critical for both productivity and their mere survival. This paper analyses seasonal changes in per capita consumption and saving behaviour of farm households in response to health and weather shocks. The notion that people save most of there transitory income, as postulated by the permanent income hypothesis, and precautionary saving motives are tested using a sample of 196 households examined over three consecutive cropping seasons in Central Kenya. The results show that, while people exhibit some level of prudence, the marginal propensity to save out of transitory income is about 33 percent - about a third of what the permanent income hypothesis postulates. This proportion saved is an indication of the extent of incompleteness of credit and insurance markets in the study area. This shows substantial scope for remedial public action in social protection programmes. Seasonality was found to impact on propensity to save with more stressful seasons adversely affecting both savings and consumption. There were differentiated propensities to smooth consumption between the rich and the poor, with the latter group exhibiting stronger precautionary motives. However, the wealth effect becomes insignificant as the seasons worsen pointing to a vulnerable asset base. Unlike weather uncertainty, consumption rise and savings decline in response to health stress associated with HIV/AIDS. The desire to smooth the health (asset) stock seems to outweigh the desire or ability to smooth future consumption through savings. The consequence is more volatile consumption for HIV/AIDS affected households. |
Subject(s)
Precautionary savings; HIV/AIDS; rainfall variability; farm households |
Language
english |
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California |
Type of publication
article |
Format
application/pdf |
Source
Ndirangu, Lydia; Burger, Kees; Moll, Hank A.J.; & Kuyvenhoven, Arie. (2009). Seasonality, precautionary savings and health uncertainty: Evidence from farm households in Central Kenya. UC Berkeley: Center for Effective Global Action. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/49g0s6x2 |
Rights
public |
Identifier
qt49g0s6x2 |
Repository
Berkeley - University of California
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Added to C-A: 2014-04-02;08:55:46 |
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