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Someone will pay for this: the socio-economics of water

The socio-economic impacts of climate change on water resources in South Africa

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Pages 265-278 | Received 18 Dec 2009, Accepted 13 Mar 2012, Published online: 13 Jun 2012
 

Abstract

Using a computable general equilibrium approach, this study investigates the economy-wide impact of reductions in water resources in South Africa due to climate change. The simulation results show a potentially general deterioration in household welfare. Poor households are the most vulnerable. Short-run policy simulations suggest that this vulnerability can be reduced through welfare policies that maintain food consumption levels for households in the two lowest income quintiles.

Notes

*This article was presented as a contributed paper at the 27th Conference of the International Association of Agricultural Economists in Beijing, China, 16–22 August 2009.

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