Abstract
The purpose of this article is to further our understanding of input choices (such as pesticides or fertilisers) when producers face production risk that depends on a random shock and on the quantity of input used. Using laboratory experiments, we study the role of risk preferences and public policies (here, a lump-sum subsidy and insurance) on producers’ input decisions in two situations: i) a risk-decreasing input; and ii) a risk-increasing input. Our findings raise questions on the sensitivity of optimal input choices to risk preferences and the relevance of the expected utility model to describe farmers’ decisions.
Keywords
laboratory experiment; input choice; production risk; risk preferences; subsidy; insurance;
Reference
Douadia Bougherara, and Céline Nauges, “How laboratory experiments could help disentangle the influences of production risk and risk preferences on input decisions”, TSE Working Paper, n. 18-903, March 2018.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 18-903, March 2018