Authors
Irene Brambilla, Guido Porto, Alessandro Tarozzi
Publication date
2012/2/1
Journal
Review of Economics and Statistics
Volume
94
Issue
1
Pages
304-319
Publisher
The MIT Press
Description
In 2003, after claims of dumping, the United States imposed heavy tariffs on Vietnamese catfish, which led to a collapse of imports. We use panel data to explore household responses in the catfish-producing Mekong delta between 2002 and 2004 and find that income growth was significantly slower among households relatively more involved in catfish farming in 2002. This is explained by a relative decline in both catfish income and revenues from other miscellaneous farm activities. Labor supply did not adjust, most likely because of off-farm employment limitations. Households more exposed to the shock reduced the share of investment assigned to catfish while substituting into agriculture.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
I Brambilla, G Porto, A Tarozzi - Yale University unpublished manuscript, 2007