Protecting the Rainforest? The Case of Mahogany Prohibition and Deforestation
Abstract
Tropical deforestation increases carbon emissions, reduces carbon sinks, simplifiesecosystems, affect soil quality, can eliminate endemic species and can drastically change
labor market prospects for local populations. All of these consequences may lead to large
private gains and losses as well as global externalities and have drawn the attention of
scholars and policy makers. More recently, the Paris Agreement stemming from the XXI
Conference of the Parties placed protection of tropical forests as a key component for
curbing climate change. Among the main causes of tropical deforestation, several
commentators have identified logging of high-value timber species as an important
precursor of large scale deforestation. A number of countries have accepted this argument
and appealed to strict policies such as logging bans to protect specific species and forests.
One example of such policy is the Brazilian mahogany market prohibition. We find
evidence that the shutting down of this market combined with poor enforcement has led
to an even larger volume of illegal mahogany harvesting. We use this result and
differences-in-differences estimation to test whether municipalities where mahogany
naturally occurs have experienced increased deforestation after prohibition. Our paper
contains two main contributions: (i) evaluation of the impact of a timber market
prohibition policy on deforestation, and (ii) the testing of the hypothesis that harvesting
of high-value timber indirectly leads to large-scale deforestation. To our best knowledge,
no study has attempted to directly estimate this hypothesis, despite its prevalence in the
tropical deforestation literature and its use to at least partly justify forest protection
policies such as logging bans. Our results suggest that the mahogany prohibition policy in
Brazil meant to protect the species and the Amazon forest has instead led to increased
deforestation in affected areas.