Adaptation to Climate Change: Evidence from US Agriculture

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Adaptation to Climate Change: Evidence from US Agriculture
Abstract
Understanding the potential impacts of climate change on economic outcomes requires knowing how agents might adapt to a changing climate. We exploit large variation in recent temperature and precipitation trends to identify adaptation to climate change in US agriculture, and use this information to generate new estimates of the potential impact of future climate change on agricultural outcomes. Longer run adaptations appear to have mitigated less than half—and more likely none—of the large negative short-run impacts of extreme heat on productivity. Limited recent adaptation implies substantial losses under future climate change in the absence of countervailing investments. (JEL Q11, Q15, Q51, Q54)
Publication
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy
Volume
8
Issue
3
Pages
106-140
Date
2016-08-01
ISSN
1945-774X
Call Number
openalex: W2208007485
Extra
openalex: W2208007485 mag: 2208007485
Citation
Burke, M., & Emerick, K. (2016). Adaptation to Climate Change: Evidence from US Agriculture. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 8(3), 106–140. https://doi.org/10.1257/pol.20130025