Xuyen Tran - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

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Tran Nhat Thang (K18 HL)

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Hue University of Agriculture and Forestry

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Papers by Xuyen Tran

Research paper thumbnail of Typhoon and agricultural production portfolioEmpirical evidence for a developing economy

International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction

In this paper, we investigate whether and how households adjust their agricultural practices such... more In this paper, we investigate whether and how households adjust their agricultural practices such as cultivation and livestock to adapt to a severe typhoon. We, therefore, make use of a natural experiment coming from the strong typhoon Ketsana in 2009. We apply the difference-indifferences approach using micro-data on the household level and spatial data of this severe typhoon. Our empirical findings suggest that households alter their agricultural activities in response to a strong typhoon. While they decrease the area planted for staple crops, i.e., rice and cassava, they tend to purchase more livestock, i.e., pigs, in the short term and in the medium term. Our paper not only indicates the adjustment to the croplivestock system as a livelihood adaptation strategy to a severe typhoon, but it also suggests the shifting trend from crop planting to livestock raising, which emphasizes the contraction of crop farming in the aftermath of this type of event.

Research paper thumbnail of Typhoon and agricultural production portfolioEmpirical evidence for a developing economy

International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction

In this paper, we investigate whether and how households adjust their agricultural practices such... more In this paper, we investigate whether and how households adjust their agricultural practices such as cultivation and livestock to adapt to a severe typhoon. We, therefore, make use of a natural experiment coming from the strong typhoon Ketsana in 2009. We apply the difference-indifferences approach using micro-data on the household level and spatial data of this severe typhoon. Our empirical findings suggest that households alter their agricultural activities in response to a strong typhoon. While they decrease the area planted for staple crops, i.e., rice and cassava, they tend to purchase more livestock, i.e., pigs, in the short term and in the medium term. Our paper not only indicates the adjustment to the croplivestock system as a livelihood adaptation strategy to a severe typhoon, but it also suggests the shifting trend from crop planting to livestock raising, which emphasizes the contraction of crop farming in the aftermath of this type of event.

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