Will Buying Tropical Forest Carbon Benefit The Poor? Evidence from Costa Rica | Land Portal

Resource information

Date of publication: 
December 2004
Resource Language: 
ISBN / Resource ID: 
AGRIS:US2012203087

We review claims about the potential for carbon markets that link both payments for carbon services and poverty levels to ongoing rates of tropical deforestation. We then examine these effects empirically for Costa Rica during the 20th century using an econometric approach that addresses the irreversibilities in deforestation. We find significant effects of the relative returns to forest on deforestation rates. Thus, carbon payments would induce conservation and also carbon sequestration, and if land users were poor could conserve forest while addressing rural poverty. However, we find poorer areas are less responsive to returns. This and transaction costs could lead carbon payments policies not to be focused upon the poor. Other practical considerations may also dampen an understandable enthusiasm for service-based payments addressing both environment and inequality. Nonetheless, as the poor live in areas with more forest, they may benefit most from payments.

Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s): 

Kerr, Suzi
Lipper, Leslie
Pfaff, Alexander S.P.
Cavatassi, Romina
Davis, Benjamin
Hendy, Joanna
Sanchez, Arturo

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