
Ethan Ligon
· ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of California, Berkeley · Resource Economics and Policy
Active 1994–2024
About
Ethan A. Ligon is a professor in the Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics at the University of California, Berkeley. His research primarily falls under the broad heading of applied microeconomics, with topics including vulnerability, risk-sharing, agricultural contracts, and intra-household allocation. Recently, he has been working on the theory and empirics of inferring levels of well-being from observations of disaggregate consumption expenditures, as well as developing measures of risk experienced by smallholders in low-income countries. His educational background includes an A.B., A.M., and Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Chicago. His research interests encompass dynamic incentives and inequality, development economics, agricultural contracts, risk sharing, intra-household allocation, and applied econometrics.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Economics
- Econometrics
- Food science
- Socioeconomics
- Industrial organization
- Economic growth
- Agricultural economics
- Microeconomics
- Business
- Environmental economics
- Commerce
- Marketing
- Public economics
- Financial economics
- Macroeconomics
Selected publications
Review of Industrial Organization · 2024 · 3 citations
- Business
- Agricultural economics
- Industrial organization
Abstract Increased transportation and logistical costs in agricultural markets have affected the spatial allocation of production in the agricultural and food sectors of the economy. We develop a spatial model of farm product procurement by a food processor, which is designed to capture the effects of supply-chain disruptions on the spatial procurement of farm products in the processed food sector. We use detailed data on production and procurement from a large California tomato processor to estimate the key parameters of the model, which allow us to calculate the price elasticity of supply for California tomato paste production and describe how changes in energy prices and transportation costs for primary agricultural products affect the supply of processed food.
CGSPace A Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research) · 2022-09-21
datasetOpen accessSenior authorThese are data for a pilot study conducted in Kenya which was meant to expose differences in the rates at which female and farmers adopted improved cassava cultivars, and whether these differences responded to different forms of engagement via extension activities.
Consumption Subaggregates Should Not Be Used to Measure Poverty
2021-09-06
bookOpen access1st authorCorrespondingFrequent measurement of poverty is challenging because measurement often relies on complex and expensive expenditure surveys that try to measure expenditures on a comprehensive consumption aggregate. This paper investigates the use of consumption subaggregates instead. The use of consumption subaggregates is theoretically justified if and only if all Engel curves are linear for any realization of prices. This is very stringent. However, it may be possible to empirically identify certain goods that happen to have linear Engel curves given prevailing prices, and when the effect of price changes is small, such a subaggregate might work in practice. The paper constructs such linear subaggregates using data from Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda. The findings show that using subaggregates is ill advised in practice as well as in theory. This also raises questions about the consistency of the poverty tracking efforts currently applied across countries, since obtaining exhaustive consumption measures remains an unmet challenge.
Consumption Subaggregates Should Not Be Used to Measure Poverty
The World Bank Economic Review · 2021 · 6 citations
- Computer Science
- Economics
- Econometrics
Abstract Frequent measurement of poverty is challenging because measurement often relies on complex and expensive expenditure surveys that try to measure expenditures on a comprehensive consumption aggregate. This paper investigates the use of consumption “subaggregates” instead. The use of consumption subaggregates is theoretically justified if and only if all Engel curves are linear for any realization of prices. This is very stringent. However, it may be possible to empirically identify certain goods that happen to have linear Engel curves given prevailing prices, and when the effect of price changes is small, such a subaggregate might work in practice. The paper constructs such linear subaggregates using data from Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda. The findings show that using subaggregates is ill advised in practice as well as in theory. This also raises questions about the consistency of the poverty tracking efforts currently applied across countries, since obtaining exhaustive consumption measures remains an unmet challenge.
Offering Postharvest Credit to Improve Farmer Welfare
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2021-11-09
dataset1st authorCorrespondingRIDIE datasets · 2021-07-15
datasetThe Registry for International Development Impact Evaluations (RIDIE), is a project of the International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie). RIDIE is a registry of impact evaluations related to development in low and middle income countries. The purpose of the registry is to enhance the transparency and quality of evaluation research as well as to provide a repository of impact evaluation studies for researchers, funders, and others.
Replication Data for: Impact evaluation of asset and cash transfers in South Sudan
Harvard Dataverse · 2021-06-16
datasetOpen access1st authorCorrespondingData collected by BRAC to compare the effects of unconditional cash transfers and assets transferred as part of a "graduation program" in a pilot project in South Sudan, 2013-15.
Impact evaluation of asset and cash transfers in South Sudan
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2021-06-15
dataset1st authorCorrespondingOffering Postharvest Credit to Improve Farmer Welfare
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2021-11-09
dataset1st authorCorrespondingOffering Postharvest Credit to Improve Farmer Welfare
AEA Randomized Controlled Trials · 2021-11-09
dataset1st authorCorresponding
Recent grants
Informal Insurance and the Extent of the Market
NSF · $296k · 2004–2008
Frequent coauthors
- 30 shared
Brent Hueth
Economic Research Service
- 22 shared
Laura Schechter
- 10 shared
Carolyn Dimitri
- 9 shared
Pierre Dubois
Toulouse School of Economics
- 7 shared
Tim Worrall
University of Edinburgh
- 6 shared
Jonathan Thomas
Swansea University
- 6 shared
Élisabeth Sadoulet
- 4 shared
Timothy G. Conley
Education
- 1994
PhD, Economics
University of Chicago
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