Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T10:33:55.009Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gendered migration responses to drought in Malawi

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2021

Luis G. Becerra-Valbuena
Affiliation:
Paris School of Economics, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, 48 Boulevard Jourdan, 75014Paris Cedex 14, France
Katrin Millock*
Affiliation:
CNRS, Paris School of Economics, Paris, France
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]
Get access

Abstract

Migration is a common means of adaptation to weather shocks. Previous research has identified heterogeneous effects according to age, sex, and wealth, but little is still known about how marriage-related institutions affect such migration. Relying on a quasi-experimental identification strategy, we analyze marriage- and work-related migration in Malawi following large droughts, separating the effects for female and male migrants according to different age groups. The analysis based on stated motives of migration reveals marginal decreases in marriage-related migration among girls, but increases in marriage-related migration within districts for women in older age groups. We also find large increases in work-related between-district migration for boys, and to a smaller extent also for girls following severe drought. The results add to the evidence of the potentially adverse effects of migration as a coping mechanism following drought when other means of insurance do not exist.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Asfaw, S., and Maggio, G. (2017) Gender, weather shocks and welfare: evidence from Malawi. The Journal of Development Studies 54(2), 271291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashraf, N., Bau, N., Nunn, N., and Voena, A. (2020) Bride price and female education. Journal of Political Economy 128(2), 591641.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baez, J., Caruso, G., Mueller, V. and Niu, C. (2017a) Droughts augment youth migration in Northern Latin America and the Caribbean. Climatic Change 140, 423435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baez, J., Caruso, G., Mueller, V. and Niu, C. (2017b) Heat exposure and youth migration in Central America and the Caribbean. American Economic Review (Papers and Proceedings) 107(5), 446540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bai, J. (2009) Panel data models with interactive fixed effects. Econometrica 77(4), 12291279.Google Scholar
Bazzi, S. (2017) Wealth heterogeneity and the income elasticity of migration. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 9(2), 219255.Google Scholar
Beegle, K., Galasso, E. and Goldberg, J. (2017) Direct and indirect effects of Malawi's public works program on food security. Journal of Development Economics 128, 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beegle, K. and Poulin, M. (2013) Migration and the transition to adulthood in contemporary Malawi. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences 648(July), 3851.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beguería, S., Vicente-Serrano, S. M., Reig, F., and Latorre, B. (2014) Standardized precipitation evapotranspiration Index (SPEI) revisited: parameter fitting, evapotranspiration models, tools, datasets and drought monitoring. International Journal of Climatology 34(10), 30013023. https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.3887CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beine, M. A. and Jeusette, L. (2018) A meta-analysis of the literature on climate change and migration. CESifo Working Paper 7417. Retrieved from http://www.cesifo.org/DocDL/cesifo1_wp7417.pdf.Google Scholar
Berlemann, M. and Steinhardt, M. F. (2017) Climate change, natural disasters, and migration—a survey of the empirical evidence. CESifo Economic Studies 63(4), 353385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cattaneo, C., Beine, M., Frohlich, C., Kniveton, D., Martinez-Zarzoso, I., Mastrorillo, M., Millock, K., Piguet, E. and Schraven, B. (2019) Human migration in an era of climate change. Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 13(2), 189206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chindarkar, N. (2012) Gender and climate change-induced migration: proposing a framework for analysis. Environmental Research Letters 7(025601).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corno, L., Hildebrandt, N. and Voena, A. (2020) Age of marriage, weather shocks, and the direction of marriage payments. Econometrica 88(3), 879915.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corno, L. and Voena, A. (2017). Selling daughters: age of marriage, income shocks and the bride price tradition. Unpublished manuscript.Google Scholar
Crespin-Boucaud, J. (2020) Interethnic and interfaith marriages in sub-Saharan Africa. World Development 125, 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dercon, S. (2002) Income risk, coping strategies, and safety nets. World Bank Research Observer 17(2), 141166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dercon, S. (2005). Insurance Against Poverty. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dillon, A., Mueller, V. and Salau, S. (2011) Migratory responses to agricultural risk in northern Nigeria. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 93(4), 10481061.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edmonds, E., and Shrestha, M. (2013) Independent child labor migrants. In Constant, A. and Zimmermann, K. (eds.), International Handbook of the Economics of Migration. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Press, pp. 98120.Google Scholar
Englund, H. (2002) The village in the city, the city in the village: migrants in Lilongwe. Journal of Southern African Studies 28(1), 137154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fafchamps, M. and Shilpi, F. (2013) Determinants of the choice of migration destination. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 75(3), 388409.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
FAO (2016) Evidence on internal and international migration patterns in selected African countries. Technical report, Rome. Available at http://www.fao.org/3/a-i7468e.pdf.Google Scholar
Funk, C., Peterson, P., Landsfeld, M., Pedreros, D., Verdin, J., Shukla, S., Husak, G., J., , et al. (2015) The climate hazards infrared precipitation with stations—a new environmental record for monitoring extremes. Scientific Data 2, 50066. https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2015.66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, C. and Mueller, V. (2012) Drought and population mobility in rural Ethiopia. World Development 40(1), 134145.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harris, I. and Jones, P. (2017). CRU TS4.01 Climatic Research Unit: Time-series version 4.01 of high-resolution gridded data of month-by-month variation in climate. University of East Anglia-Centre for Environmental Data Analysis, 04 December 2017.Google Scholar
Hatton, T. J. and Williamson, J. G. (2003) Demographic and economic pressure on emigration out of Africa. The Scandinavian Journal of Economics 105(3), 465486.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henry, S., Piche, V., Ouedrago, D. and Lambin, E. (2004b) Descriptive analysis of the individual migratory pathways. Population and Environment 25(5), 397422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henry, S., Schoumaker, B. and Beauchemin, C. (2004a) The impact of rainfall on the first out-migration: a multi-level event history analysis in Burkina Faso. Population and Environment 25(5), 423460.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hirvonen, K. (2016) Temperature changes, household consumption, and internal migration: evidence from Tanzania. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 98(4), 12301249.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffmann, R., Dimitrova, A., Muttarak, R., Crespo Cuaresma, J., and Peisker, J. (2020) A meta-analysis of country-level studies on environmental change and migration. Nature Climate Change 10, 904912. doi: 10.1038/s41558-020-0898-6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoogeveen, J., van der Klaauw, B. and van Lomwel, G. (2011) On the timing of marriage, cattle and shocks. Economic Development and Cultural Change 60(1), 121154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hotte, R. and Marazyan, K. (2019) Demand for insurance and within-kin-group marriages: Evidence from a West-African country. Working Paper.Google Scholar
Jovanovic, N., Alwang, A. and Ricker-Gilbert, J. (2019). Short-term returns to agricultural household migration decisions: Evidence from a tracking panel data study in Malawi. 2019 Annual Meeting, July 21–23, Atlanta, Georgia, Agricultural and Applied Economics Association.Google Scholar
Kazianga, H. and Udry, C. (2006) Consumption smoothing? Livestock, insurance and drought in rural Burkina Faso. Journal of Development Economics 79(2), 413446.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kubik, Z. and Maurel, M. (2016) Weather shocks, agricultural production, and migration: evidence from Tanzania. Journal of Development Studies 52(5), 665680.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewin, P. A., Fisher, M. and Weber, B. (2012) Do rainfall conditions push or pull rural migrants: evidence from Malawi. Agricultural Economics 43, 191204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowes, S., and Nunn, P. (2018) Bride price and the wellbeing of women. In Anderson, S., Beaman, L. and Platteau, J.-P. (eds.), Towards Gender Equity in Development. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 117138.Google Scholar
Makwemba, M., Chinsinga, B., Kantukule, C. T., Munthali, A., Woldegorgis, M., Haenni, S. and Lin, Q. (2019) Traditional practices in Malawi. Technical report, Center for Child Well-being and Development at the University of Zurich.Google Scholar
McKee, T. B., Doesken, N. J. and Kleist, J. (1993) The relationship of drought frequency and duration of time scales. Eighth Conference on Applied Climatology, American Meteorological Society, Anaheim CA:179–186.Google Scholar
Millock, K. (2015) Migration and environment. Annual Review of Resource Economics 7(1), 3560.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mobarak, A. M., Kuhn, R. and Peters, C. (2013) Consanguinity and other marriage market effects of a wealth shock in Bangladesh. Demography 50, 18451871.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mueller, V., Gray, C., and Kosec, K. (2014) Heat stress increases long-term human migration in rural Pakistan. Nature Climate Change, 4, 182185. doi: 10.1038/NCLIMATE2103.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nichols, A. (2003) Vincenty: Stata module to calculate distances on the earth's surface. Statistical Software Components S456815, Boston College Department of Economics, 1(revised 16 Feb 2007).Google Scholar
Robinson, A. L., and Gottlieb, J. (2021) How to close the gender gap in political participation: lessons from matrilineal societies in Africa. British Journal of Political Science 51(1), 92. doi: 10.1017/S0007123418000650.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenzweig, M. R. and Stark, O. (1989) Consumption smoothing, migration, and marriage: evidence from rural India. Journal of Political Economy 97(4), 905926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thiede, B. and Gray, C. (2017) Erratum to: heterogeneous climate effects on human migration in Indonesia. Population and Environment 39, 173195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vicente-Serrano, S. M., Beguería, S. and López-Moreno, J. I. (2010) A multi-scalar drought index sensitive to global warming: the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index—SPEI. Journal of Climate 23, 16961718.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Supplementary material: PDF

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material 1

Download Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 1.1 MB
Supplementary material: File

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material 2

Download Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material(File)
File 48.9 MB
Supplementary material: File

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material 3

Download Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material(File)
File 120.2 KB
Supplementary material: File

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material

Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material 4

Download Becerra-Valbuena and Millock supplementary material(File)
File 1.1 KB