Increasing water stress, exacerbated by the rising frequency and intensity of droughts, poses a significant threat to smallholder farmers within water-stressed regions. This study examines perceptions of irrigation water scarcity (IWS) among 501 Egyptian smallholder farmers, their intentions to adopt farm-level mitigation strategies, and their migration aspirations. Findings reveal significant heterogeneity in farmers’ perceptions of IWS severity, emphasizing the need for tailored interventions addressing distinct challenges across farmer groups. Perceived IWS severity and trust in water-management institutions significantly influence farmers’ adoption of farm-level coping strategies. The results further reveal a spectrum of migration aspirations among farmers, ranging from minimal relocation interest to firm commitment. Migration decisions are driven by three factors: resource availability, institutional credibility, and personal risk assessments. Notably, migration outcomes—whether gains or losses—are unevenly distributed and closely linked to observed migration profiles. These findings provide critical insights into the nonlinear IWS-migration nexus, demonstrating how extreme water stress (beyond coping thresholds) triggers committed migration. Overall, the findings underscore the need for dual-track policies: proactively equipping vulnerable farmers with adaptive resources to prevent IWS-induced displacement, while implementing tiered systems to sustain resilient livelihoods or manage inevitable relocation.
Research Fellows
Assem Abu Hatab
Professor of Development Economics, Nordic Africa Institute...
Authors
Mohamed Abdelhameed Ahmed Mohamed
Associate Professor, Fayoum University
Authors
Shilpa Muliyil Asokan
Senior Researcher, Climate, Natural Resources & Sustainability,...
Authors
Carl-Johan Lagerkvist
Professor in Business Economics, Swedish University of...
