Townsend Thai Project Initial Household Survey, 1997
Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)
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Title |
Townsend Thai Project Initial Household Survey, 1997
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Identifier |
https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/IXHQXU
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Creator |
Robert M. Townsend
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Publisher |
Harvard Dataverse
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Description |
The project is carried out in Thailand under the direction of Khun Sombat Sakuntasathhien and dedicated staff. The project is administered in the United States at the National Opinion Research Center and the University of Chicago. Survey design and research collaborators include Anna Paulson of Northwestern University, Tae Joeng Lee of Yonse University, and Michael Binford of the University of Florida. Robert M. Townsend is overall project director and principal investigator. The initial purpose of the NICHD-NSF funded project was to evaluate the role of informal institutions such as the family and local networks in helping to support the welfare and well-being of individuals in semi-urban and rural areas of Thailand. Risk, and the potentially adverse and direct consequences of household- and firm-specific shocks is a key part of project. The mediating role of the family and social and economic networks in the mobilization of savings and allocation of credit was also deemed essential. These networks are not viewed in isolation but rather are part of the larger village, regional, and national level financial system. Thus the project includes an evaluation of village-level financial institutions, such as Production Credit Groups and rice banks, and national-level financial institutions such as commercial banks and the government agricultural bank, the Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives (BAAC). Indeed, the project has both micro and macro aspects. It seeks to evaluate informal and formal financial institutions and markets and to construct and evaluate macro models of growth, fluctuations, and crisis. The macro models are based on the measured micro- underpinnings. The household survey included an initial census, a baseline interview on initial conditions of sampled households, forms which gather information on the use of contracts and informal institutions, a nd monthly interviews to track changing conditions. Environmental data are gathered courtesy of grants from the Melon foundation and the University of Chicago. This includes soil analysis, plot photos, daily rainfall, soil moisture, water chemistry, and other bi-weekly water measurements. This ongoing data collection effort includes at present 36 months. |
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Date |
1997
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