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References for Economic effects of natural disasters
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Further reading
- Université Catholique de Louvain (UCL)—CRED, D. Guha-Sapir EM-DAT: The Emergency Events Database. Brussels: Université Catholique de Louvain (UCL)—CRED, D. Guha-Sapir, 2021.
- Henry, M., Spencer, N., Strobl, E. "The impact of tropical storms on households: Evidence from panel data on consumption" Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 82:1 (2020): 1–22.
- Kahn, M. E. "The death toll from natural disasters: The role of income, geography, and institutions" Review of Economics and Statistics 87:2 (2005): 271–284.
- Toya, H., Skidmore, M. "Economic development and the impacts of natural disasters" Economics Letters 94:1 (2007): 20–25.
- del Valle, A., de Janvry, A., Sadoulet, E. "Rules for recovery: Impact of indexed disaster funds on shock coping in Mexico" American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 12:4 (2020): 164–195.
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Key references
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Strobl, E. "The economic
growth impact of hurricanes: Evidence from US coastal
counties" Review of
Economics and Statistics 93:2 (2011): 575–589. Key reference: [1]
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Deryugina, T. "The fiscal cost of
hurricanes: Disaster aid versus social insurance" American Economic
Journal: Economic Policy 9:3 (2017): 168–198. Key reference: [2]
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Kocornik-Mina, A., McDermott, T. K. J., Michaels, G., Rauch, F. "Flooded
cities" American Economic
Journal: Applied Economics 12:2 (2020): 35–66. Key reference: [3]
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Boustan, L. P., Kahn, M. E., Rhode, P. W., Yanguas, M. L. "The effect of
natural disasters on economic activity in US counties: A century
of data" Journal of Urban
Economics (2020). Key reference: [4]
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Gröger, A., Zylberberg, Y. "Internal labor
migration as a shock coping strategy: Evidence from a
typhoon" American Economic
Journal: Applied Economics 8:2 (2016): 123–153. Key reference: [5]
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Deryugina, T., Kawano, L., Levitt, S. "The economic
impact of hurricane Katrina on its victims: Evidence from
individual tax returns" American Economic
Journal: Applied Economics 10:2 (2018): 202–233. Key reference: [6]
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Groen, J. A., Kutzbach, M. J., Polivka, A. E. "Storms and jobs:
The effect of hurricanes on individuals’ employment and earnings
over the long term" Journal of Labor
Economics 38:3 (2020): 653–685. Key reference: [7]
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Sastry, N., Gregory, J. "The effect of
Hurricane Katrina on the prevalence of health impairments and
disability among adults in New Orleans: Differences by age,
race, and sex" Social Science
& Medicine 80 (2013): 121–129. Key reference: [8]
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Raker, E. J., Lowe, S. R., Arcaya, M. C., Johnson, S. T., Rhodes, J., Waters, M. C. "Twelve years
later: The long-term mental health consequences of Hurricane
Katrina" Social Science
& Medicine (2019). Key reference: [9]
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Deryugina, T., Molitor, D. "Does when you die
depend on where you live? Evidence from Hurricane
Katrina" American Economic
Review 110:11 (2020): 3602–3633. Key reference: [10]
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Strobl, E. "The economic
growth impact of hurricanes: Evidence from US coastal
counties" Review of
Economics and Statistics 93:2 (2011): 575–589.
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Additional References
- Balboni, C. A. In Harm's Way? Infrastructure Investments and the Persistence of Coastal Cities Working Paper, 2021.
- Currie, J., Rossin-Slater, M. "Weathering the storm: Hurricanes and birth outcomes" Journal of Health Economics 32:3 (2013): 487–503.
- Gallagher, J. "Learning about an infrequent event: Evidence from flood insurance take-up in the United States" American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 6:3 (2014): 206–233.
- Gallagher, J., Hartley, D. "Household finance after a natural disaster: The case of Hurricane Katrina" American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 9:3 (2017): 199–228.
- Gray, C. L., Mueller, V. "Natural disasters and population mobility in Bangladesh" Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109:16 (2012): 6000–6005.
- Hornbeck, R., Keniston, D. "Creative destruction: Barriers to urban growth and the Great Boston Fire of 1872" American Economic Review 107:6 (2017): 1365–1398.
- Karbownik, K., Wray, A. "Long-run consequences of exposure to natural disasters" Journal of Labor Economics 37:3 (2019): 949–1007.
- Mahajan, P., Yang, D. "Taken by storm: Hurricanes, migrant networks, and US immigration" American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 12:2 (2020): 250–277.
- Martinez, A. B. "Forecast accuracy matters for hurricane damage" Econometrics 8:2 (2020): 18.
- Nakamura, E., Sigurdsson, J., Steinsson, J. "The gift of moving: Intergenerational consequences of a mobility shock" Review of Economic Studies (Forthcoming).
- Raschky, P. A. "Institutions and the losses from natural disasters" Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 8:4 (2008): 627–634.
- Siodla, J. "Razing San Francisco: The 1906 disaster as a natural experiment in urban redevelopment" Journal of Urban Economics 89 (2015): 48–61.
- Wagner, K. Adaptation and Adverse Selection in Markets for Natural Disaster Insurance Working Paper No., 2019.
- Yang, D. "International migration, remittances and household investment: Evidence from Philippine migrants’ exchange rate shocks" The Economic Journal 118:528 (2008): 591–630.