Economic damage from natural hazards can sometimes be prevented and always mitigated. However, private individuals tend to underinvest in such measures due to problems of collective action, information asymmetry and myopic behavior. Governments, which can in principle correct these market failures, themselves face incentives to underinvest in costly disaster prevention policies and damage mitigation regulations. Yet, disaster damage varies greatly across countries. We argue that rational actors will invest more in trying to prevent and mitigate damage the larger a country's propensity to experience frequent and strong natural hazards. Accordingly, economic loss from an actually occurring disaster will be smaller the larger a country's disas...
This paper examines the effect of natural disasters on the savings rate in developing countries. The...
As the world becomes wealthier over time, inflation-adjusted insured damages from natural disasters ...
Natural hazards can be seen as a function of a specific natural process and human (economic) activi...
Economic damage from natural hazards can sometimes be prevented and always mitigated. However, priva...
Economic damage from natural hazards can sometimes be prevented and always mitigated. However, priv...
Earthquakes, hurricanes, floods and other such disasters all cause damage in relatively restricted a...
Climate change is likely to lead to an increase in the frequency and/or intensity of certain types o...
We show that the relationship between wealth and economic losses due to natural disasters is strongl...
While people all over the world are vulnerable to natural disasters, the available data clearly dem...
Economic losses from natural disasters vary by countries, and it has been hypothesized that institut...
These papers present the economic issues debates that arise when natural disasters strike. Better me...
Natural disasters happen in all parts of the world, some countries are situated in especially hazard...
Disasters affect significant numbers of people in the poorest parts of the world. The main impedimen...
Climate change has increased the frequency and intensity of natural disasters. Does this translate i...
The authors analyze the determinants of fatalities in 2,194 large flood events in 108 countries betw...
This paper examines the effect of natural disasters on the savings rate in developing countries. The...
As the world becomes wealthier over time, inflation-adjusted insured damages from natural disasters ...
Natural hazards can be seen as a function of a specific natural process and human (economic) activi...
Economic damage from natural hazards can sometimes be prevented and always mitigated. However, priva...
Economic damage from natural hazards can sometimes be prevented and always mitigated. However, priv...
Earthquakes, hurricanes, floods and other such disasters all cause damage in relatively restricted a...
Climate change is likely to lead to an increase in the frequency and/or intensity of certain types o...
We show that the relationship between wealth and economic losses due to natural disasters is strongl...
While people all over the world are vulnerable to natural disasters, the available data clearly dem...
Economic losses from natural disasters vary by countries, and it has been hypothesized that institut...
These papers present the economic issues debates that arise when natural disasters strike. Better me...
Natural disasters happen in all parts of the world, some countries are situated in especially hazard...
Disasters affect significant numbers of people in the poorest parts of the world. The main impedimen...
Climate change has increased the frequency and intensity of natural disasters. Does this translate i...
The authors analyze the determinants of fatalities in 2,194 large flood events in 108 countries betw...
This paper examines the effect of natural disasters on the savings rate in developing countries. The...
As the world becomes wealthier over time, inflation-adjusted insured damages from natural disasters ...
Natural hazards can be seen as a function of a specific natural process and human (economic) activi...