Adaptation Attitudes Are Guided by “Lived Experience” Rather than Electoral Interests: Evidence from a Survey Experiment in Bangladesh

Author:

Eisenstadt Todd A.1ORCID,Haque Sk Tawfique M.2ORCID,Toman Michael A.3ORCID,Wright Matthew4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Government, American University, Washington, DC 20016, USA

2. South Asian Institute of Policy and Governance, North-South University, Dhaka 1229, Bangladesh

3. Resources for the Future, Washington, DC 20036, USA

4. Political Science Department, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada

Abstract

After decades of presuming that climate adaptation is a private good benefitting only those receiving resources to reduce individual climate risks, respondents in a survey experiment among the climate-vulnerable in Bangladesh chose less-particularistic adaptation projects than “electoral connection” disaster relief theories predict and more “short-sighted” projects than international diplomats anticipate. This article reports on the experiment, which asked a representative national sample of Bangladeshis whether they favor spending funds on short-term particularistic solutions (disaster relief stockpiles), medium-term inclusionary and non-excludable solutions (ocean embankments), or long-term, public goods solutions (the development of flood-resistant rice seeds). More respondents chose “middle ground” embankment spending, and a statistically significant change in respondent propensities was tied to their lived experience with climate vulnerability rather than electoral incentives. The logic of their choices contradicts existing explanations, implying that a reconsideration of vulnerable community preferences, and how to address them, may be needed.

Funder

World Bank

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference31 articles.

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