Abstract

The increased exposure of pastoralist communities in East Africa to climatic shocks has focused attention on the resilience of these communities. Although many social scientists directly or indirectly infer versions of homo-economic agents, increasing evidence in development behavioral economics, indicates that such assumptions may be misplaced. Despite on-going advances in the science concerning the effects of stress on dynamic changes in short-term cognitive capacity, there remains limited understanding of the effects of changes in cognitive capacity on economic decision making. The present research empirically evaluates the drivers of short-term changes in cognitive capacity–cognitive ability and heuristic use–and its effect on crop and livestock expenditure among predominantly poor Kenyan agro-pastoralists. Three rounds of cognition and survey data from Samburu, Kenya is analysed. The primary data was collected at the end of the 2015–16 East African drought and covers an 11-month period between October 2016 and September 2017. Dynamic panel estimation, employing maximum likelihood, is used on balanced and unbalanced data. Results indicate that fluid intelligence and heuristic use, along with literacy and stressors, affect crop expenditure. Perceptions of scarcity, relative to prior expectations, are also identified as an important determinant of short-term changes in cognitive ability. These results underscore the importance of better understanding the effects of short-term changes in cognitive capacity on economic expenditure among the poor.

Highlights

  • Eradication of poverty is a global priority

  • Fluid intelligence is used in this study, no reference or interpretation is given to Intelligent Quota (IQ)

  • The importance of hypothesized stressors in predicting changes in cognitive ability indicates that the measures of fluid intelligence and working memory capacity remain meaningful for the given population

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Summary

Introduction

Eradication of poverty is a global priority. This priority is reflected in poverty eradication listed as the first Millennium Development Goal and Sustainable Development Goal. The barriers to poverty elimination are many. Barriers may be ecological or social, in line with socio-ecological systems (SES) [1, 2]. Sources of income for the rural poor are predominantly.

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