Shedding Light on the Spatial Diffusion of Disasters

Gabriel Felbermayr, J. Gröschl, M. Sanders, Vincent G. Schippers, Thomas Steinwachs
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Climate research suggests that global warming will lead to more frequent and more extreme natural disasters. Most disasters are local events with effects on local economic growth. Hence, assessing their economic impacts with the help of econometric country-level analysis may lead to biased results. Moreover, correct identification is further complicated by the possibility that local shocks shift production and consumption to neighboring locations. In this paper, annual night-time light emission data covering about 24,000 grid cells for the years 1992-2013 are matched to geocoded information on meteorological and geological events. Spatial econometric panel methods are applied to account for interdependencies between locations. Interpreting variation in light emissions as reflecting changes in economic activity, findings convey evidence for pronounced local average treatment effects and strong spatial spillovers, particularly for weather shocks. In particular, results suggest that spatial shifts of economic activity after a natural disaster are a rather local phenomenon, stressing the importance of local adaptation policies. Moreover, substantial heterogeneity across income groups and regions is identified.
揭示灾害的空间扩散
气候研究表明,全球变暖将导致更频繁、更极端的自然灾害。大多数灾害都是局部事件,对当地经济增长产生影响。因此,在计量经济学国家层面分析的帮助下评估其经济影响可能会导致有偏差的结果。此外,由于当地的冲击可能会将生产和消费转移到邻近地区,正确的识别变得更加复杂。本文将1992-2013年约2.4万个网格单元的年度夜间光发射数据与气象和地质事件的地理编码信息进行匹配。空间计量面板方法被用于解释地点之间的相互依赖关系。研究结果将光辐射的变化解释为反映经济活动的变化,提供了明显的当地平均处理效果和强烈的空间溢出效应的证据,特别是对天气冲击。特别是,研究结果表明,自然灾害后经济活动的空间转移是一个相当局部的现象,强调了地方适应政策的重要性。此外,还发现了收入群体和地区之间的巨大异质性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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