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Deforestation and human development in the Brazilian Tropical dry forest

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Deforestation and human development in the Brazilian Tropical dry forest. / Alencar, Lucas; Parry, Luke; Melo, Felipe.
In: Forest Policy and Economics, Vol. 178, 103571, 30.09.2025.

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Alencar L, Parry L, Melo F. Deforestation and human development in the Brazilian Tropical dry forest. Forest Policy and Economics. 2025 Sept 30;178:103571. Epub 2025 Jun 27. doi: 10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103571

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@article{c652661f8a06432cba597e497dad50c5,
title = "Deforestation and human development in the Brazilian Tropical dry forest",
abstract = "The relationship between tropical deforestation and human development is unclear and contested. We evaluated the boom-bust hypothesis across agricultural frontiers in the Brazilian Caatinga dry forest, one of the largest dry forests in the world and home to 28 million people. We used panel data (1991, 2000 and 2010), and cross-sectional data (2010) from 1207 municipalities to assess how development indicators are linked to deforestation through a quasi-experimental approach. Our main finding is that deforestation in the Caatinga is associated with a boom-bust development pattern or at least to a stagnation in development in highly deforested municipalities. Municipalities at the advanced stage of deforestation (<33 % of forest cover remaining) in 1991 generally had higher development indicators than the initial stage (>66 % remaining), but differences between these groups disappeared by 2010. Intermediate stage municipalities (33–66 % remaining) consistently outperformed initial and/or advanced stage municipalities in four out of six development indicators (longevity, monetary income, extreme poverty prevalence, and child mortality), indicating a temporary {\textquoteleft}boom{\textquoteright} during frontier advance, followed by a stagnation. Evidence of a boom-bust was supported by cross-sectional analysis of 2010 data using propensity score weighting and a spatial autoregressive model. Overall, our findings contribute to on-going debate and strengthen the boom-bust hypothesis. By implication, the mere consumption of natural resources is inadequate to ensure sustained development progress. Achieving sustainability in Brazil's agricultural frontiers necessitates more than apolitical technical solutions; it requires active engagement by the state, non-state institutions, and society as a whole to address the country's deep-seated inequalities and imbalanced power dynamics.",
author = "Lucas Alencar and Luke Parry and Felipe Melo",
year = "2025",
month = jun,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103571",
language = "English",
volume = "178",
journal = "Forest Policy and Economics",
issn = "1389-9341",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Deforestation and human development in the Brazilian Tropical dry forest

AU - Alencar, Lucas

AU - Parry, Luke

AU - Melo, Felipe

PY - 2025/6/27

Y1 - 2025/6/27

N2 - The relationship between tropical deforestation and human development is unclear and contested. We evaluated the boom-bust hypothesis across agricultural frontiers in the Brazilian Caatinga dry forest, one of the largest dry forests in the world and home to 28 million people. We used panel data (1991, 2000 and 2010), and cross-sectional data (2010) from 1207 municipalities to assess how development indicators are linked to deforestation through a quasi-experimental approach. Our main finding is that deforestation in the Caatinga is associated with a boom-bust development pattern or at least to a stagnation in development in highly deforested municipalities. Municipalities at the advanced stage of deforestation (<33 % of forest cover remaining) in 1991 generally had higher development indicators than the initial stage (>66 % remaining), but differences between these groups disappeared by 2010. Intermediate stage municipalities (33–66 % remaining) consistently outperformed initial and/or advanced stage municipalities in four out of six development indicators (longevity, monetary income, extreme poverty prevalence, and child mortality), indicating a temporary ‘boom’ during frontier advance, followed by a stagnation. Evidence of a boom-bust was supported by cross-sectional analysis of 2010 data using propensity score weighting and a spatial autoregressive model. Overall, our findings contribute to on-going debate and strengthen the boom-bust hypothesis. By implication, the mere consumption of natural resources is inadequate to ensure sustained development progress. Achieving sustainability in Brazil's agricultural frontiers necessitates more than apolitical technical solutions; it requires active engagement by the state, non-state institutions, and society as a whole to address the country's deep-seated inequalities and imbalanced power dynamics.

AB - The relationship between tropical deforestation and human development is unclear and contested. We evaluated the boom-bust hypothesis across agricultural frontiers in the Brazilian Caatinga dry forest, one of the largest dry forests in the world and home to 28 million people. We used panel data (1991, 2000 and 2010), and cross-sectional data (2010) from 1207 municipalities to assess how development indicators are linked to deforestation through a quasi-experimental approach. Our main finding is that deforestation in the Caatinga is associated with a boom-bust development pattern or at least to a stagnation in development in highly deforested municipalities. Municipalities at the advanced stage of deforestation (<33 % of forest cover remaining) in 1991 generally had higher development indicators than the initial stage (>66 % remaining), but differences between these groups disappeared by 2010. Intermediate stage municipalities (33–66 % remaining) consistently outperformed initial and/or advanced stage municipalities in four out of six development indicators (longevity, monetary income, extreme poverty prevalence, and child mortality), indicating a temporary ‘boom’ during frontier advance, followed by a stagnation. Evidence of a boom-bust was supported by cross-sectional analysis of 2010 data using propensity score weighting and a spatial autoregressive model. Overall, our findings contribute to on-going debate and strengthen the boom-bust hypothesis. By implication, the mere consumption of natural resources is inadequate to ensure sustained development progress. Achieving sustainability in Brazil's agricultural frontiers necessitates more than apolitical technical solutions; it requires active engagement by the state, non-state institutions, and society as a whole to address the country's deep-seated inequalities and imbalanced power dynamics.

U2 - 10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103571

DO - 10.1016/j.forpol.2025.103571

M3 - Journal article

VL - 178

JO - Forest Policy and Economics

JF - Forest Policy and Economics

SN - 1389-9341

M1 - 103571

ER -