3 research outputs found
The economic cost of a hurricane : A case study of Puerto Rico and Hurricane Georges 1998 using synthetic control method
Treballs Finals del M脿ster d'Economia, Facultat d'Economia i Empresa, Universitat de Barcelona, Curs: 2017-2018, Tutor: Daniel AlbalateThe aim of this study is to evaluate the long-term effect of a hurricane in the output of a country. We estimated the effects of Hurricane Georges on Puerto Rico in 1998 using aggregated level data. To do so, we used a suitable method for comparative studies, the synthetic control method. Hurricane Georges caused an estimate of US$4.3 billion in direct damages. Our results gives validity to recent studies on natural disasters providing negative effects on growth. We find that the Purchasing Power Parity over GDP could have been 9 percent higher by 2010 if the hurricane would have never affected Puerto Rico. Moreover, we show that Puerto Rico鈥檚 economy has yet to recover after 12 years of the event. The case of Georges brings an insight of the long-term impacts of a natural disaster as a singular event. A difference in time and country is conducted as an alternative method with also negative effects on the dependable variable
The Economic Cost of A Hurricane: A Case Study of Puerto Rico and Hurricane Georges 1998 Using Synthetic Control Method
The aim of this study is to evaluate the long鈥搕erm effect of a hurricane in the output of a country. The study estimates the effects of Hurricane Georges on Puerto Rico in 1998 using aggregated level data. To do so, this research uses a suitable method for comparative studies, the synthetic control method. Hurricane Georges caused an estimate of US $4.3 billion in direct damages. The results give validity to recent studies on natural disasters providing negative effects on growth. It was found that the Purchasing Power Parity over GDP could have been 9 percent higher by 2010 if the hurricane would have never affected Puerto Rico. Moreover, it shows that Puerto Rico鈥檚 economy has yet to recover after 12 years of the event. The case of Georges brings an insight into the long鈥搕erm impacts of a natural disaster as a singular event. A difference in time and country is conducted as an alternative method with also negative effects on the dependable variable
Endogenous Economic Resilience, Loss of Resilience, Persistent Cycles, Multiple Attractors, and Disruptive Contractions
We evaluate Brunnermeier鈥檚 theory of resilience in the context of
complex system dynamics where, however, there can be local and global
resilience, vulnerability, loss of resilience, cycles, disruptive contractions,
and persistent traps. In the paper, we refer to three time scales. First, for
shorter time scales, for the short-run market dynamics, we evaluate resilience
in the context of complex market dynamics that have been studied in the history of economic theory for long. Second, with respect to a business cycle
medium-term dynamics, we analytically study an endogenous cycle model,
built upon Semmler and Sieveking (1993, Journal of Economic Behavior &
Organization, 22(2), 189-208) and Semmler and Koc抬kesen (2017, Technical
report, New School for Social Research, Department of Economics), and
discuss the issue of loss of stability, corridor stability, multiple attractors, and
trapping dynamics also in the light of complex dynamics. In a financial-real
business cycle model, we demonstrate forces that indeed can exhibit multiple
dynamic features such as local resilience, known as corridor stability, but
also other dynamic phenomena. Corridor stability pertains to small shocks
with no lasting effects, but large enough shocks can lead to persistent cycles
and/or contractions. We refer to the Hopf and Bautin bifurcation theorems, to
establish corridor stability, and local resilience, for the interaction of real and
financial variables where the trajectories can be stable or unstable in the
vicinity of the equilibrium. Thus they can switch dynamic behavior for small
or large shocks. Similar complex dynamic phenomena can be obtained from
Kaleckian-Kaldorian nonlinear real business cycle models, particularly when
time delays are allowed. Third, whereas the analytical study of the dynamics
is undertaken for the above second time scale, for the longer time scale we
study, in the context of multiple equilibria models, the issue of thresholds, tipping points and disruptive contractions, and persistence of traps