Preeya S. Mohan, Nekeisha Spencer, Eric Strobl. Natural Hazard-Induced Disasters and Production Efficiency: Moving Closer to or Further from the Frontier?[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2019, 10(2): 166-178. doi: 10.1007/s13753-019-0218-9
Citation: Preeya S. Mohan, Nekeisha Spencer, Eric Strobl. Natural Hazard-Induced Disasters and Production Efficiency: Moving Closer to or Further from the Frontier?[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2019, 10(2): 166-178. doi: 10.1007/s13753-019-0218-9

Natural Hazard-Induced Disasters and Production Efficiency: Moving Closer to or Further from the Frontier?

doi: 10.1007/s13753-019-0218-9
  • Available Online: 2021-04-26
  • Production efficiency is a key determinant of economic growth and demonstrates how a country uses its resources by relating the quantity of its inputs to its outputs. When a natural hazard-induced disaster strikes, it has a devastating impact on capital and labor, but at the same time provides an opportunity to upgrade capital and increase labor demand and training opportunities, thereby potentially boosting production efficiency. We studied the impact of natural hazard-induced disasters on countries' production efficiency, using the case study of hurricanes in the Caribbean. To this end we built a country-specific, time-varying data set of hurricane damage and national output and input indicators for 17 Caribbean countries for the period 1940-2014. Our results, using a stochastic frontier approach, show that there is a short-lived production efficiency boost, and that this can be large for very damaging storms.
  • loading
  • Admassie, A., and F.A.S.T. Matambalya. 2002. Technical efficiency of small-and medium-scale enterprises:Evidence from a survey of enterprises in Tanzania. Eastern Africa Social Science Research Review 1(2):1-29.
    Albala-Bertrand, J.M. 1993. Natural disaster situations and growth:A macroeconomic model for sudden disaster impacts. World Development 21(9):1414-1434.
    Arunsawadiwong, S. 2007. Productivity trends in the Thai manufacturing sector:The pre-and post-crisis evidence relating to the 1997 economic crisis. Ph.D dissertation. St. Andrews, Scotland:University of St. Andrews.
    Auffhammer, M., S.M. Hsiang, W. Schlenker, and A. Sobel. 2013. Using weather data and climate model output in economic analyses of climate change. Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 7(2):181-198.
    Auffret, P. 2003. High consumption volatility:The impact of natural disasters? Policy Research Working Paper No. 2962. Washington, DC:The World Bank.
    Banerjee, L. 2007. Effect of flood on agricultural wages in Bangladesh:An empirical analysis. World Development 35(11):1989-2009.
    Belasen, A.R., and S.W. Polachek. 2008. How hurricanes affect wages and employment in local labor markets. American Economic Review 98(2):49-53.
    Benson, C., and E.J. Clay. 2004. Understanding the economic and financial impacts of natural disasters. Disaster Risk Management Series No. 4. Washington, DC:The World Bank.
    Bluedorn, J.C. 2005. Hurricanes:Intertemporal trade and capital shocks. Economics Papers No. 2005-W22. Oxford:Economics Group.
    Boose, E., M.I. Serrano, and D.R. Foster. 2004. Landscape and regional impacts of hurricanes in Puerto Rico. Ecological Monograph 74(2):335-352.
    Coelli, T. 1996. A guide to DEAP version 2.1:A data envelopment analysis (computer) program. CEPA Working Paper 96/08. Armidale, NSW, Australia:Centre for Efficiency and Productivity Analysis, University of New England.
    Coelli, T.J., D.S.P. Rao, C.J. O'Donnell, and G.E. Battese. 2005. An introduction to efficiency and productivity analysis, 2nd edn. New York:Springer.
    Crowards, T. 2000. An index of inherent economic vulnerability for developing countries. Barbados:Caribbean Development Bank.
    Driscoll, J.C., and A.C. Kraay. 1998. Consistent covariance matrix estimation with spatially dependent panel data. Review of Economic Statistics 80(4):-549-560.
    Emanuel, K. 2011. Global warming effects on U.S. hurricane damage. Weather, Climate, and Society 3:261-268.
    Ewing, B.T., J.B. Kruse, and M.A. Thompson. 2009. Twister! Employment responses to the 3 May 1999 Oklahoma City Tornado. Applied Economics 41(6):691-702.
    Felbermayr, G., and J. Gröschl. 2014. Naturally negative:The growth effects of natural disasters. Journal of Development Economics 111(C):92-106.
    Halkos, G., S. Managi, and N.G. Tzeremes. 2015. The effect of natural and man-made disasters on countries' production efficiency. Journal of Economic Structures 4(1):Article 10.
    Hallegatte, S., and P. Dumas. 2009. Can natural disasters have positive consequences? Investigating the role of embodied technical change. Ecological Economics 68(3):777-786.
    Holland, G.J. 1980. An analytical model of the wind and pressure profiles in hurricanes. Monthly Weather Review 108(8):1212-1218.
    Horwich, G. 2000. Economic lessons of the Kobe Earthquake. Economic Development and Cultural Change 48(3):521-542.
    Kao, C. 1999. Spurious regression and residual-based tests for cointegration in panel data. Journal of Econometrics 90(1):1-44.
    Kirton, M. 2013. Caribbean regional disaster response and management mechanisms:Prospects and challenges. The Brookings London School of Economics, Project on Internal Displacement.
    Lee, S., and Y. Lee. 2014. Stochastic frontier models with threshold efficiency. Journal of Productivity Analysis 42(1):45-54.
    Leiter, A.M., H. Oberhofer, and P.A. Raschky. 2009. Creative disasters? Flooding effects on capital, labour and productivity within European firms. Environmental and Resource Economics 43(3):333-350.
    Libois, F., and V. Verardi. 2013. Semiparametric fixed-effects estimator. The Stata Journal 13(2):329-336.
    Loayza, N., E. Olaberría, J. Rigolini, and L. Christiansen. 2012. Natural disasters and growth-going beyond the averages. World Development 40(7):1317-1336.
    McDermott, T.K.J., F. Barry, and R.S.J. Tol. 2014. Disasters and development:Natural disasters, credit constraints, and economic growth. Oxford Economic Papers 66(3):750-773.
    Mohan, P. 2016. Diversification and development in small island developing states. The World Economy 39(9):1434-1453.
    Mohan, P., B. Ouattara, and E. Strobl. 2018. Decomposing the macroeconomic effects of natural disasters:A national income accounting perspective. Ecological Economics 146:1-9.
    Noy, I. 2009. The macroeconomic consequences of disasters. Journal of Development Economics 88(2):221-231.
    Noy, I., and A. Nualsri. 2007. What do exogenous shocks tell us about growth theories? Working Paper, No. 07-16. https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/64100/1/60462350X.pdf. Accessed 3 May 2019.
    Pelling, M., and J.I. Uitto. 2001. Small island developing states:Natural disaster vulnerability and global change. Environmental Hazards 3(2):49-62.
    Puig-Junoy, J. 2002. Technical inefficiency and public capital in U.S. States:A stochastic frontier approach. Journal of Regional Science 41(1):75-96.
    Raddatz, C. 2007. Are external shocks responsible for the instability of output in low income countries? Journal of Development Economics 84(1):155-187.
    Rasmussen, T.N. 2004. Macroeconomic implications of natural disasters in the Caribbean. Washington, DC:The International Monetary Fund.
    Sarmiento, C. 2007. The impact of flood hazards on local employment. Applied Economics Letters 14(15):1123-1126.
    Skidmore, M., and H. Toya. 2002. Do natural disasters promote long-run growth? Economic Inquiry 40(4):664-687.
    Spencer, N., and S. Polachek. 2015. Hurricane watch:Battening down the effects of the storm on local crop production. Ecological Economics 120:234-240.
    Spencer, N., and M. Urquhart. 2018. Hurricane strikes and migration:Evidence from storms in central America and the Caribbean. Weather, Climate, and Society 10:569-577.
    Strobl, E. 2011. The economic growth impact of hurricanes:Evidence from US coastal counties. Review of Economics and Statistics 93(2):575-589.
    Strobl, E. 2012. The economic growth impact of natural disasters in developing countries:Evidence from hurricane strikes in the central American and Caribbean regions. Journal of Development Economics 97(1):130-141.
    Wadud, M.A. 2003. Technical, allocative, and economic efficiency of farms in Bangladesh:A stochastic frontier and DEA approach. Journal of Developing Areas 37(1):109-126.
  • 加载中

Catalog

    通讯作者: 陈斌, bchen63@163.com
    • 1. 

      沈阳化工大学材料科学与工程学院 沈阳 110142

    1. 本站搜索
    2. 百度学术搜索
    3. 万方数据库搜索
    4. CNKI搜索

    Article Metrics

    Article views (52) PDF downloads(0) Cited by()
    Proportional views
    Related

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return