| By: | Urvashi Narain (Resources for the Future, Washington DC); 
Shreekant Gupta (Delhi School of Economics); 
Klaas vant Veld (University of Wyoming, Laramie) | 
| Abstract: | Using purpose-collected survey data from 535 households in 60 different 
villages of the Jhabua district of India, this paper investigates the extent 
to which rural households depend on common-pool natural resources for their 
daily livelihood. Previous studies have found that resource dependence-- 
defined as the fraction of total income derived from common-pool 
resources--strongly decreases with income. Our study uncovers a more complex 
relationship. Firstly, for the subsample of households that use positive 
amounts of resources, we find that dependence follows a U-shaped relationship 
with income, declining at first but then increasing. Secondly, we find that 
the probability of being in the subsample of common-pool resource users 
follows an inverse U-shaped relationship with income - the poorest and richest 
households are less likely to collect resources than those with intermediate 
incomes. Resource use by the rich is therefore bimodal - either very high 
or--for the very rich households--zero. Thirdly, we find that resource 
dependence increases at all income levels with an increase in the level of 
common-pool biomass availability. The combination of these results suggests 
that the quality of natural resources matters to a larger share of the rural 
population than had previously been believed, common-pool resources contribute 
a significant fraction of the income not just of the desperately poor, but 
also of the relatively rich. | 
| Keywords: | India, Madhya Pradesh, poverty, environment, common-pool natural resources,rural households | 
| JEL: | Q2 D31 Q12 Q56 O13 I32 | 
| Date: | 2005–04 | 
| URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cde:cdewps:134&r=dev |