Journal article

Investment traps and resilience to shocks: An experimental study of Central Asian collective water governance


Authors listAmirova, Iroda; Petrick, Martin; Djanibekov, Nodir

Publication year2022

Pages110-123

JournalIrrigation and Drainage

Volume number71

ISSN1531-0353

eISSN1531-0361

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1002/ird.2704

PublisherWiley


Abstract
We theoretically and empirically investigate the investments of water users in a stylized local irrigation system. We model irrigation self-management as an interdependent interaction of users in an evolutionary game and study the resilience of the irrigation system. The theoretical model implies multiple stable equilibria at different efficiency levels. Users may be trapped in a low level of collective investment or succeed by being locked in a high collective investment level, implying an irrigation system resilient against external shocks. The study seeks to empirically identify such lock-ins in experimental interactions among Central Asian farmers. Furthermore, we inquire into whether a pre-play cheap talk opportunity with peer-monitoring or sanctioning treatments influence the self-reinforcing dynamic. Our findings revealed several stable states. Among these states, there are both low and high levels of efficiency, which we measure in the size of public good. Communication among users results in higher collective investment levels. However, this does not guarantee the complete elimination of inferior conventions from best-response play. Penalties crowded out the intrinsic motivation to cooperate as they reduced collective investment in both low- and high-level equilibria. Our findings imply that institutional settings tailored to each community can improve resilience to climate-driven perturbations in water resources.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleAmirova, I., Petrick, M. and Djanibekov, N. (2022) Investment traps and resilience to shocks: An experimental study of Central Asian collective water governance, Irrigation and Drainage, 71, pp. 110-123. https://doi.org/10.1002/ird.2704

APA Citation styleAmirova, I., Petrick, M., & Djanibekov, N. (2022). Investment traps and resilience to shocks: An experimental study of Central Asian collective water governance. Irrigation and Drainage. 71, 110-123. https://doi.org/10.1002/ird.2704


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:37