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Underinvestment in a profitable technology: the case of seasonal migration in Bangladesh

journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by G Bryan, S Chowdhury, Ahmed MobarakAhmed Mobarak
© 2014 The Econometric Society. Hunger during pre-harvest lean seasons is widespread in the agrarian areas of Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. We randomly assign an $8.50 incentive to households in rural Bangladesh to temporarily out-migrate during the lean season. The incentive induces 22% of households to send a seasonal migrant, their consumption at the origin increases significantly, and treated households are 8-10 percentage points more likely to re-migrate 1 and 3 years after the incentive is removed. These facts can be explained qualitatively by a model in which migration is risky, mitigating risk requires individual-specific learning, and some migrants are sufficiently close to subsistence that failed migration is very costly. We document evidence consistent with this model using heterogeneity analysis and additional experimental variation, but calibrations with forward-looking households that can save up to migrate suggest that it is difficult for the model to quantitatively match the data. We conclude with extensions to the model that could provide a better quantitative accounting of the behavior.

History

Journal

Econometrica

Volume

82

Pagination

1671-1748

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0012-9682

eISSN

1468-0262

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

Wiley