articleEconomic InquirySep 5, 2002Closed access

DO NATURAL DISASTERS PROMOTE LONG‐RUN GROWTH?

University of Wisconsin–Whitewater · Nagoya City University

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Abstract

In this article, we investigate the long‐run relationships among disasters, capital accumulation, total factor productivity, and economic growth. The cross‐country empirical analysis demonstrates that higher frequencies of climatic disasters are correlated with higher rates of human capital accumulation, increases in total factor productivity, and economic growth. Though disaster risk reduces the expected rate of return to physical capital, risk also serves to increase the relative return to human capital. Thus, physical capital investment may fall, but there is also a substitution toward human capital investment. Disasters also provide the impetus to update the capital stock and adopt new technologies,…

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1,030
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18.95
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100%
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Physical capital
  • Capital deepening
  • Economics
  • Total factor productivity
  • Human capital
  • Investment (military)
  • Capital Consumption Allowance
  • Capital (architecture)
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