The Effects of Crop-to-Beef Relative Prices on Deforestation: Evidence from the Tapajós Basin
Abstract
This paper examines the impact of changes in agricultural land use on deforestation at the local level in the Tapajós Basin in the Brazilian Amazon. It uses exogenous variation in crop-to-beef relative prices to investigate... [ view full abstract ]
This paper examines the impact of changes in agricultural land use on deforestation at the local level in the Tapajós Basin in the Brazilian Amazon. It uses exogenous variation in crop-to-beef relative prices to investigate the effects of pasture-to-cropland conversion on deforestation. The findings indicate that increases in crop-to-beef relative prices increase the rate of pasture-to-cropland conversion and reduce the rate of deforestation. The magnitude of the effects implies that land conversion reduced deforestation at the local level in 5,300 square kilometers from 2002 to 2012. This reduction is the equivalent of almost 15\% of the total deforestation observed in the region during this period. These results are consistent with a land use model in which cattle ranching and crop cultivation have different input-intensities and there is imperfect mobility of productive factors between municipalities. This model highlights that changes in relative prices affect deforestation through its effect on input prices.
Authors
-
Arthur Bragança
(PUC-Rio)
Topic Areas
O. Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth: O1. Economic Develo , Q. Agricultural and Natural Resource Economics • Environmental and Ecological Economics: Q , Q. Agricultural and Natural Resource Economics • Environmental and Ecological Economics: Q
Session
CS5-12 » Deforestation and Climate Change (14:00 - Saturday, 11th November, Moliere)
Paper
Tapajos_Final.pdf
Presentation Files
The presenter has not uploaded any presentation files.