Effects of climate change on depopulating regional economies through changes in Japan’s rice production and recovery policies

The present study measures the impact of climate change induced by global warming on the regional economies through changes in Japan’s rice production in a society experiencing a depopulation trend and analyzes economic effects of three recovery policies from climate change such as an import policy,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inAsia-Pacific journal of regional science Vol. 4; no. 3; pp. 691 - 712
Main Authors Tokunaga, Suminori, Okiyama, Mitsuru, Ikegawa, Maria
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Singapore Springer Singapore 01.10.2020
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The present study measures the impact of climate change induced by global warming on the regional economies through changes in Japan’s rice production in a society experiencing a depopulation trend and analyzes economic effects of three recovery policies from climate change such as an import policy, technological innovation policy of rice, and labor substitution policy. Our findings show that the real GRP of each region will decline by 20–30% relative to 2005 given climate change in a society experiencing depopulation. Moreover, the national equivalent variation will decrease by 71.5 trillion yen, and the equivalent variation per capita will decrease by 812,000 yen in the case of mean value. On the other hand, long-term climate change has different impacts in each region and expands regional economic disparities. Also, to mitigate the influence of climate change, three simulations were carried out in three scenarios for an import policy, a technological innovation policy of rice, and a labor substitution policy. When evaluating the results, a technological innovation policy was preferable to an import policy and a labor substitution policy. Therefore, by including other rice crops and their increases, we must promote aggressive R&D investments for agricultural production from the early stage before being affected by global warming.
ISSN:2509-7946
2509-7954
DOI:10.1007/s41685-020-00153-9