The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican Republic

Abstract The Dominican Republic is highly exposed to adverse natural events that put the country at risk of losing hard-won economic, social, and environmental gains due to the impacts of disasters. This study used monthly nightlight composites in conjunction with a wind field model to econometrical...

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Main Authors: Oscar A. Ishizawa, Juan José Miranda, Eric Strobl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-08-01
Series:International Journal of Disaster Risk Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13753-019-00226-0
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spelling doaj-abc87b02ebe1434a8b4a3b7c2ba2674c2020-11-25T03:54:03ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Disaster Risk Science2095-00552192-63952019-08-0110336237010.1007/s13753-019-00226-0The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican RepublicOscar A. Ishizawa0Juan José Miranda1Eric Strobl2World Bank Group, Social, Urban, Rural and Resilience (SURR) Global PracticeEconomic Research, World Bank GroupUniversity of BernAbstract The Dominican Republic is highly exposed to adverse natural events that put the country at risk of losing hard-won economic, social, and environmental gains due to the impacts of disasters. This study used monthly nightlight composites in conjunction with a wind field model to econometrically estimate the impact of tropical cyclones on local economic activity in the Dominican Republic since 1992. It was found that the negative impact of storms lasts up to 15 months after a strike, with the largest effect observed after 9 months. Translating the reduction in nightlight intensity into monetary losses by relating it to quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) suggests that on average the storms reduced GDP by about USD 1.1 billion (4.5% of GDP 2000 and 1.5% of GDP 2016).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13753-019-00226-0Dominican RepublicEconometric analysisHurricanesNightlights
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oscar A. Ishizawa
Juan José Miranda
Eric Strobl
spellingShingle Oscar A. Ishizawa
Juan José Miranda
Eric Strobl
The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican Republic
International Journal of Disaster Risk Science
Dominican Republic
Econometric analysis
Hurricanes
Nightlights
author_facet Oscar A. Ishizawa
Juan José Miranda
Eric Strobl
author_sort Oscar A. Ishizawa
title The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican Republic
title_short The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican Republic
title_full The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican Republic
title_fullStr The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican Republic
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Hurricane Strikes on Short-Term Local Economic Activity: Evidence from Nightlight Images in the Dominican Republic
title_sort impact of hurricane strikes on short-term local economic activity: evidence from nightlight images in the dominican republic
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Disaster Risk Science
issn 2095-0055
2192-6395
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Abstract The Dominican Republic is highly exposed to adverse natural events that put the country at risk of losing hard-won economic, social, and environmental gains due to the impacts of disasters. This study used monthly nightlight composites in conjunction with a wind field model to econometrically estimate the impact of tropical cyclones on local economic activity in the Dominican Republic since 1992. It was found that the negative impact of storms lasts up to 15 months after a strike, with the largest effect observed after 9 months. Translating the reduction in nightlight intensity into monetary losses by relating it to quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) suggests that on average the storms reduced GDP by about USD 1.1 billion (4.5% of GDP 2000 and 1.5% of GDP 2016).
topic Dominican Republic
Econometric analysis
Hurricanes
Nightlights
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13753-019-00226-0
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