Poverty trap or means to escape poverty? Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Poverty trap or means to escape poverty? Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal. / Walelign, Solomon Zena; Charlery, Lindy Callen; Pouliot, Mariève.

In: Journal of Development Studies, Vol. 57, No. 10, 2021, p. 1613-1639.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Walelign, SZ, Charlery, LC & Pouliot, M 2021, 'Poverty trap or means to escape poverty? Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal', Journal of Development Studies, vol. 57, no. 10, pp. 1613-1639. https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2021.1873282

APA

Walelign, S. Z., Charlery, L. C., & Pouliot, M. (2021). Poverty trap or means to escape poverty? Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal. Journal of Development Studies, 57(10), 1613-1639. https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2021.1873282

Vancouver

Walelign SZ, Charlery LC, Pouliot M. Poverty trap or means to escape poverty? Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal. Journal of Development Studies. 2021;57(10):1613-1639. https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2021.1873282

Author

Walelign, Solomon Zena ; Charlery, Lindy Callen ; Pouliot, Mariève. / Poverty trap or means to escape poverty? Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal. In: Journal of Development Studies. 2021 ; Vol. 57, No. 10. pp. 1613-1639.

Bibtex

@article{b9bbc6c4aa6247aa8a18d815860408cf,
title = "Poverty trap or means to escape poverty?: Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal",
abstract = "Understanding how poverty persists and how this affects environmental reliance has policy implications for poverty reduction and environmental conservation. Employing a panel data-set from rural Nepal, we shed light on this issue, using a combination of parametric and nonparametric models. Results show that, as a population, households will converge at a single equilibrium point in the long-term, hence indicating the absence of a poverty trap. The exact asset level of this single equilibrium point, which indicates the absence of a poverty trap, varies between groups of households (for example, based on location, marital status). Based on the convergence point of the entire study population, two groups of households are identified: one situated above the convergence point and another situated below the point. Total environmental income, that is, all income from forest and non-forest environments, is very important to households below the convergence point. Although total environmental income is not a major contributor to asset accumulation, its non-forest component is a significant and positive contributor. We attribute the importance to their looser restriction to access, than for forest resources. Hence, securing greater access to forests without affecting the conservation priorities will help improve the contribution of forest resources to poverty reduction.",
author = "Walelign, {Solomon Zena} and Charlery, {Lindy Callen} and Mari{\`e}ve Pouliot",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1080/00220388.2021.1873282",
language = "English",
volume = "57",
pages = "1613--1639",
journal = "Journal of Development Studies",
issn = "0022-0388",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis Online",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Poverty trap or means to escape poverty?

T2 - Empirical evidence on the role of environmental income in rural Nepal

AU - Walelign, Solomon Zena

AU - Charlery, Lindy Callen

AU - Pouliot, Mariève

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Understanding how poverty persists and how this affects environmental reliance has policy implications for poverty reduction and environmental conservation. Employing a panel data-set from rural Nepal, we shed light on this issue, using a combination of parametric and nonparametric models. Results show that, as a population, households will converge at a single equilibrium point in the long-term, hence indicating the absence of a poverty trap. The exact asset level of this single equilibrium point, which indicates the absence of a poverty trap, varies between groups of households (for example, based on location, marital status). Based on the convergence point of the entire study population, two groups of households are identified: one situated above the convergence point and another situated below the point. Total environmental income, that is, all income from forest and non-forest environments, is very important to households below the convergence point. Although total environmental income is not a major contributor to asset accumulation, its non-forest component is a significant and positive contributor. We attribute the importance to their looser restriction to access, than for forest resources. Hence, securing greater access to forests without affecting the conservation priorities will help improve the contribution of forest resources to poverty reduction.

AB - Understanding how poverty persists and how this affects environmental reliance has policy implications for poverty reduction and environmental conservation. Employing a panel data-set from rural Nepal, we shed light on this issue, using a combination of parametric and nonparametric models. Results show that, as a population, households will converge at a single equilibrium point in the long-term, hence indicating the absence of a poverty trap. The exact asset level of this single equilibrium point, which indicates the absence of a poverty trap, varies between groups of households (for example, based on location, marital status). Based on the convergence point of the entire study population, two groups of households are identified: one situated above the convergence point and another situated below the point. Total environmental income, that is, all income from forest and non-forest environments, is very important to households below the convergence point. Although total environmental income is not a major contributor to asset accumulation, its non-forest component is a significant and positive contributor. We attribute the importance to their looser restriction to access, than for forest resources. Hence, securing greater access to forests without affecting the conservation priorities will help improve the contribution of forest resources to poverty reduction.

U2 - 10.1080/00220388.2021.1873282

DO - 10.1080/00220388.2021.1873282

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85100733768

VL - 57

SP - 1613

EP - 1639

JO - Journal of Development Studies

JF - Journal of Development Studies

SN - 0022-0388

IS - 10

ER -

ID: 257869979