Revisiting the ‘disaster and development’ debate – Toward a broader understanding of macroeconomic risk and resilience
Item
Title (Dublin Core)
Revisiting the ‘disaster and development’ debate – Toward a broader understanding of macroeconomic risk and resilience
Description (Dublin Core)
Debate regarding the relationship between socioeconomic development and natural disasters remains at the fore of global discussions, as the potential risk from climate extremes and uncertainty pose an increasing threat to developmental prospects. This study reviews statistical investigations of disaster and development linkages, across topics of macroeconomic growth, public governance and others to identify key challenges to the current approach to macro-level statistical investigation. Both theoretically and qualitatively, disaster is known to affect development through a number of channels: haphazard development, weak institutions, lack of social safety nets and short-termism of our decision-making practices are some of the factors that drive natural disaster risk. Developmental potentials, including the prospects for sustainable and equitable growth, are in turn threatened by such accumulation of disaster risks. However, quantitative evidence regarding these complex causality chains remains contested due to several reasons. A number of theoretical and methodological limitations have been identified, including the use of GDP as a proxy measurement of welfare, issues with natural disaster damage reporting and the adoption of ad hoc model specifications and variables, which render interpretation and cross-comparison of statistical analysis difficult. Additionally, while greater attention is paid to economic and institutional parameters such as GDP, remittance, corruption and public expenditure as opposed to hard-to-quantify yet critical factors such as environmental conditions and social vulnerabilities. These are gaps in our approach that hamper our comprehensive understanding of the disaster-development nexus. Important areas for further research are identified, including recognizing and addressing the data constraints, incorporating sustainability and equity concerns through alternatives to GDP, and finding novel approaches to examining the complex and dynamic relationships between risk, vulnerability, resilience, adaptive capacity and development.
Creator (Dublin Core)
Junko Mochizuki
Reinhard Mechler
Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler
Adriana Keating
Keith Williges
Subject (Dublin Core)
Review
Natural disasters and development
Macroeconomic and statistical analysis
Risk vulnerability and resilience
Meteorology. Climatology
QC851-999
Publisher (Dublin Core)
Elsevier
Date (Dublin Core)
2014-01-01T00:00:00Z
Type (Dublin Core)
article
Identifier (Dublin Core)
2212-0963
10.1016/j.crm.2014.05.002
https://doaj.org/article/b9735798f7054ce19aeb9042e1769ae0
Source (Dublin Core)
Climate Risk Management, Vol 3, Iss C, Pp 39-54 (2014)
Language (Dublin Core)
EN
Relation (Dublin Core)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212096314000205
https://doaj.org/toc/2212-0963
Provenance (Dublin Core)
Journal Licence: CC BY-NC-ND