Risk sharing and kinship tightness: Evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa

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2024
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Abstract
Previous literature provides evidence of partial informal insurance in developing countries where formal financial markets are deficient and people must rely on informal institutions to face unexpected events. I explore the impact of kinship tightness on informal risk sharing in Sub-Saharan Africa. By integrating household-level data from the Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) with kinship characteristics from the Ethnographic Atlas, I investigate how historical kinship structures influence the ability of households to manage income shocks in environments where access to formal financial markets is limited. I employ an OLS approach including individual and district level controls to address endogeneity concerns. I also analyze neighboring districts to isolate the effect of kinship tightness better and reinforce the robustness of the OLS results. The analysis reveals that tighter kinship networks facilitate effective risk-sharing behaviors, and help mitigate the adverse effects of income shocks on consumption. Results are robust to a range of tests and to the inclusion of various cultural and ethnic characteristics that, according to the literature, influence economic outcomes.
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Tesis (Magíster en Economía)--Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, 2024
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