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Main Authors: DeSisto, Camille, Rasolofoson, Ranaivo, Foley, Michelle, Parikh, Harsh
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.13706
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author DeSisto, Camille
Rasolofoson, Ranaivo
Foley, Michelle
Parikh, Harsh
author_facet DeSisto, Camille
Rasolofoson, Ranaivo
Foley, Michelle
Parikh, Harsh
contents Tropical deforestation and rural poverty are deeply intertwined, yet isolating the causal effect of income on forest loss remains challenging. We use the 2015 global vanilla price boom, triggered by food-industry shifts toward natural flavoring, as an exogenous income shock affecting Madagascar's primary vanilla-producing region. Using a matching-augmented synthetic control design, we estimate that income gains reduced annual deforestation by 1.7 percentage points in 2017, equivalent to approximately 701 hectares of avoided forest loss. Under a monotonicity assumption linking the price boom to farmers' income, the sign of this reduced-form effect is informative about the causal direction of income on deforestation. However, effects were strongly heterogeneous: higher incomes reduced deforestation in drier, more accessible municipalities but increased clearing in wetter, low-elevation areas with high agricultural potential. These divergent patterns suggest that income simultaneously relaxes subsistence pressures driving forest dependence and raises the opportunity cost of conservation where agricultural returns are high. Our findings indicate that commodity-based agroforestry can align poverty alleviation with forest conservation under conditions of low agricultural opportunity cost. Still, policies must anticipate contexts where rising incomes amplify deforestation in agriculturally suitable land. The strategic targeting of livelihood interventions based on local agricultural potential may help reconcile development and conservation objectives in tropical forest frontiers.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_13706
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle When Does Agroforestry Income Reduce Deforestation? Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Madagascar
DeSisto, Camille
Rasolofoson, Ranaivo
Foley, Michelle
Parikh, Harsh
Applications
Tropical deforestation and rural poverty are deeply intertwined, yet isolating the causal effect of income on forest loss remains challenging. We use the 2015 global vanilla price boom, triggered by food-industry shifts toward natural flavoring, as an exogenous income shock affecting Madagascar's primary vanilla-producing region. Using a matching-augmented synthetic control design, we estimate that income gains reduced annual deforestation by 1.7 percentage points in 2017, equivalent to approximately 701 hectares of avoided forest loss. Under a monotonicity assumption linking the price boom to farmers' income, the sign of this reduced-form effect is informative about the causal direction of income on deforestation. However, effects were strongly heterogeneous: higher incomes reduced deforestation in drier, more accessible municipalities but increased clearing in wetter, low-elevation areas with high agricultural potential. These divergent patterns suggest that income simultaneously relaxes subsistence pressures driving forest dependence and raises the opportunity cost of conservation where agricultural returns are high. Our findings indicate that commodity-based agroforestry can align poverty alleviation with forest conservation under conditions of low agricultural opportunity cost. Still, policies must anticipate contexts where rising incomes amplify deforestation in agriculturally suitable land. The strategic targeting of livelihood interventions based on local agricultural potential may help reconcile development and conservation objectives in tropical forest frontiers.
title When Does Agroforestry Income Reduce Deforestation? Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Madagascar
topic Applications
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.13706