Cultivating Coca: the (un)importance of the Price of Legal Alternatives

27.05.2025 12:30 – 13:30

GENEVA TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOP

Jointly with Sophie de Vries Robbé

Abstract:

Abstract
Colombia is the world’s major producer of coca leaves. An important pillar of Colombia’s efforts to curb the production of this illicit crop is to induce farmers to substitute coca for a legal alternative. In this paper we identify the extent to which farmers respond to variation in the price of five of the most promising legal alternatives when deciding how much coca to plant – coffee, sugar, palm oil, cocoa, and banana. We do this using a rich, spatially very detailed dataset that contains yearly information on the amount of coca grown in each of over 31,000 villages (veredas) in Colombia over the period 2001-2018. For identification, we exploit exogenous variation in legal crop prices, in combination with detailed information about the soil and climatic suitability of each vereda for growing each crop. We find a significant, robust response of coca cultivation to price changes of coffee and banana - the two most labor-intensively produced legal alternatives to coca: when their price goes up, less coca is found in veredas that are better suited to growing these crops. Furthermore, we show that our findings are driven by veredas with better (road) access, those closer to army stations, and those without good access to Colombia's waterways that are heavily used by coca(ine) traffickers.

Biographical note: Please see:https://sites.google.com/site/maartenbosker2/

Lieu

Bâtiment: Maison de la paix

Graduate Institute
Room S8
Maison de la Paix
2 Chemin Eugène-Rigot
1202 Genève

Organisé par

Faculté d'économie et de management
Institute of Economics and Econometrics

Intervenant-e-s

Maarten BOSKER, Professor, Erasmus University Rotterdam

entrée libre

Classement

Catégorie: Séminaire

Plus d'infos

www.unige.ch/gsem/en/research/seminars/iee/

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