Ebb and Flow: Volume 1. Water, Migration, and Development

Page 43

Chapter One : Transitions and Transformations

BOX 1.4: Exploring Water Scarcity through Water Shocks Water scarcity arises when the supply of water available in a region is unable to meet the local demand. People and places adapt over time to ensure that adequate water is provided to meet expected local consumption requirements. Local infrastructure and institutions coevolve with the concentration of economic activity and population in a region by responding to the demand-supply gap and the inflow of workers and capital into a region. This makes the issue of water scarcity difficult to quantify. Water stress can occur for many different geoclimatic and anthropogenic reasons including weather anomalies such as those that will accompany climate change; the presence of weak institutions around irrigation and water markets; and sudden population growth such as those brought about by forced displacement. To reduce the dimensionality of the question, this report focuses on the effect of fluctuations in rainfall away from its long-term local average. This approach of using “water shocks” induced by rainfall allows for analytic techniques that can isolate the impacts of water availability. Because they are unanticipated, these shocks act as natural experiments that allow for the comparison of economic outcomes in regions that experience them with regions that do not (or the same region but in a different year), much like a clinical trial would compare a treated population with a placebo group. By controlling for other critical characteristics that can influence the relationship, one can then isolate the impact that these shocks have on migration and development. Relying on such “water shocks” helps to provide a rigorous quantitative analysis of the impacts as well as an evidence-based discussion of policy implications for a range of related water-scarcity issues.

are both warm and dry in the same location, with the tropics and subtropics facing more record-breaking dry events (Lehmann, Mempel, and Coumou 2018; Sarhadi et al. 2018). These effects are likely to intensify in the future with increases in both interannual and intraseasonal variability in some regions (World Bank, forthcoming). Often referred to as misery in slow motion, droughts are likely to become even more frequent and intense (Damania et al. 2017). Scientists warn that two thirds of the Earth’s land is already on track to lose water, and by the late twenty-first century the global land area and population facing extreme droughts could more than double from 3 percent during 1976–2005 to 7–8 percent. These estimates mean that nearly 700 million people, or 8 percent of the projected future population, could be affected by extreme drought compared with 200 million over recent decades (Pokhrel et al. 2021).

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Policy Options at the Destination

11min
pages 144-148

Policy Options at the Origin

8min
pages 136-139

Figure 5.1 Policy Approaches at the Source and Destination Figure 5.2 Share of Regions in North Africa and G5 Sahel Countries That Experienced Different Types of

1min
page 135

The Policy Challenge

2min
page 134

Key Highlights

1min
page 133

Years of Water Deficits, 1992–2013

1min
page 114

Quantifying the Cost of Day Zero–Like Events

4min
pages 112-113

Key Highlights

1min
page 105

The Importance of Water for Growth

2min
page 109

References

3min
pages 103-104

Note

2min
page 102

Implications for Development Policy

2min
page 101

Productivity, Growth, and Welfare

4min
pages 97-98

References

13min
pages 83-88

Map B3.3.1 The Subregions of Brazil, Indonesia, and Mexico Explored Using Census Data Map 4.1 Location of Cities Experiencing Deep Three-Plus

1min
page 96

Key Highlights

1min
page 89

Notes

2min
page 82

Water as a Conduit for Development

4min
pages 80-81

Box 2.4 Water Shocks and Declining Wetlands

2min
page 77

Green Infrastructure

8min
pages 73-76

Box 2.2 Choosing Not to Migrate Box 2.3 Measuring the Buffering Effect of Gray and

2min
page 71

Migration?

1min
page 72

Should I Stay or Should I Go? Estimating the Impacts of Water Shocks on Migration Decisions Does Buffering Rural Income from Rainfall Shocks Influence

2min
page 65

Introduction

2min
page 64

Key Highlights

1min
page 63

Spotlight: Inequality, Social Cohesion, and the COVID-19 Public Health Crisis at the Nexus of Water and Migration

16min
pages 55-62

References

10min
pages 50-54

Box 1.6 Social Cleavages Run Deep

2min
page 49

Box 1.3 COVID-19 (Coronovirus) Fallout

4min
pages 41-42

Box 1.4 Exploring Water Scarcity through Water Shocks

2min
page 43

Climate Change and the Increasing Variability of Rainfall Learning about Water’s Role in Global Migration from

1min
page 40

References

1min
pages 33-34

Going with the Flow: The Policy Challenge

11min
pages 25-32

Box 1.2 Is Water a Locational Fundamental?

2min
page 38

The Cost of Day Zero Events: What Are the Development Implications for Shocks in the City?

3min
pages 23-24

Focus of the Report

6min
pages 16-18

Box 1.1 Water and the Urbanizing Force of Development

1min
page 37

Focus of the Report

1min
page 36

Introduction

1min
page 35
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