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  4. Global economic growth and agricultural land conversion under uncertain productivity improvements in agriculture
 
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Global economic growth and agricultural land conversion under uncertain productivity improvements in agriculture

Auteur(s)
Lanz, Bruno 
Institut de recherches économiques 
Dietz, Simon
Swanson, Tim
Date de parution
2018
In
American Journal of Agricultural Economics
No
100 (1)
De la page
545
A la page
569
Revu par les pairs
1
Mots-clés
  • C61 - Optimization Techniques
  • Programming Models
  • Dynamic Analysis J11 - Demographic Trends
  • Macroeconomic Effects
  • and Forecasts O11 - Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development O13 - Agriculture
  • Natural Resources
  • Energy
  • Environment
  • Other Primary Products O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and Incentives Q16 - R&D
  • Agricultural Technology
  • Biofuels
  • Agricultural Extension Services Q24 - Land
  • C61 - Optimization Te...

  • Programming Models

  • Dynamic Analysis J11 ...

  • Macroeconomic Effects...

  • and Forecasts O11 - M...

  • Natural Resources

  • Energy

  • Environment

  • Other Primary Product...

  • Agricultural Technolo...

  • Biofuels

  • Agricultural Extensio...

Résumé
We study how stochasticity in the evolution of agricultural productivity interacts with economic and population growth at the global level. We use a two-sector Schumpeterian model of growth, in which a manufacturing sector produces the traditional consumption good and an agricultural sector produces food to sustain contemporaneous population. Agriculture demands land as an input, itself treated as a scarce form of capital. In our model both population and sectoral technological progress are endogenously determined, and key technological parameters of the model are structurally estimated using 1960-2010 data on world GDP, population, cropland and technological progress. Introducing random shocks to the evolution of total factor productivity in agriculture, we show that uncertainty optimally requires more land to be converted into agricultural use as a hedge against production shortages, and that it significantly affects both optimal consumption and population trajectories.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/27582
_
10.1093/ajae/aax078
Type de publication
journal article
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