Effects of Education on Climate Risk Vulnerability in the Philippines: Evidence from Regional Panel Data

Type Journal Article - The Philippine Statistician
Title Effects of Education on Climate Risk Vulnerability in the Philippines: Evidence from Regional Panel Data
Author(s)
Volume 62
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 53-69
URL http://nap.psa.gov.ph/ncs/12thncs/papers/CONTRIBUTED/CPS-1 Socio Economic Statistics​I/CPS-1_2_Effects of Education on Climate Risk Vulnerability in the Philippines.pdf
Abstract
The effects of climate change are being felt disproportionately in the world’s
poorest countries and among those groups of people least able to cope. The Philippines,
being a storm-lashed nation, is one country having high climate change vulnerability and
low climate change resilience. A number of researches have suggested investments on
adaptation which place strong emphasis on reducing vulnerability to climate change.
Focusing on climate change vulnerability in the Philippines, this study examines the effect
of one particular type of government intervention: increasing the level of education. In this
study, the effect of education on vulnerability to climate change is examined in a regional
panel data analysis using official Philippine statistics from the Natural Disaster Risk
Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), Labor Force Survey (LFS), National
Statistical Coordination Board (NSCB). Using the fixed-effects Poisson (FEP) regression
model, the study establishes that at the community level, the number of employed college
graduates is a significant factor that reduces climate risk vulnerability (measured by a
number of deaths from natural disasters), controlling for other factors such as number of
disasters, gross regional domestic product (GRDP), and population size.

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