Disaster reduction policies need to be more hazard specific,
taking into account the distinctive ways in which the two
broad categories of hazard, hydro-meteorological (flood, drought,
tropical cyclones) and geophysical (earthquake, volcanic eruption)
are likely to impact on economies and social systems. A
more hazard specific approach requires closer multi-disciplinary
collaboration between scientists, to understand risks hazards,
and social scientists, to explore vulnerabilities.
3. Tom Crowards, who has investigated the effects
of natural disasters on small Caribbean
economies, felt the study makes an important
contribution to our economic understanding of disasters
in demonstrating the diversity of hazard risks, and that
vulnerability must not be treated as a static process. The
study provokingly hypothesizes a Kuznets-type relationship,
in which disaster impacts may initially increase with development,
as structural change reduces vulnerability, but expanding
linkages and integration within an economy make impacts
more widespread. He felt more complementary research was
needed on the poverty implications of natural disasters,
and, from a policy perspective, on understanding how low
income countries were to genuinely take account of disasters
risks in PRSPs, planning for poverty reduction. On public
finance, the study has drawn attention to the complex, sensitive
relationships between aid allocations, governance and disaster
vulnerability.
4. Jose Miguel Albala Betrand, a well-known sceptic
about the economic
effects of disasters , suggested that the study's
most interesting result was to confirm that 'stable development'
is the main factor in reducing hazard vulnerability. But
this can take too long to cater for the most vulnerable
people and activities and well focused development (hazard)
policies are required. In understanding the macro-economic
effects of disasters he suggested that it was helpful to
distinguish between situations when hazard events are likely
to be 'localised' or 'widespread' in their impacts in a
two dimensional sense, contrasting geographical effects
and also events whose impacts are only sectoral or affecting
the whole economy.
5. In discussion, there appeared to be a generally shared
concern about the close association between the severest
disasters and budgetary chaos, and that the public financial
and aid dimensions needed closer consideration. There was,
the chair suggested in closing, a shared recognition that
the report is raising important, difficult and complex issues
that merit further debate and investigation.
An article by Charlotte Benson and Edward Clay presenting
the main findings and conclusions of the study will be published
shortly with the same title as the meeting: Charlotte Benson
and Edward Clay, 'Beyond the Damage: Probing the Economic
and Financial Consequences of Natural Disasters', Humanitarian
Exchange, no. 27, July 2004.
Further reading
Benson, C. and Edward J. Clay.
2002. 'Bangladesh: disasters and public finance.' Disaster
Risk Management Working Paper Series No.6. Washington, D.C.:
World Bank. http://www.proventionconsortium.org/files/bangladesh.pdf
Benson, C. and Edward J. Clay.
2001. 'Dominica: natural disasters and economic development
in a small island state.' Disaster Risk Management Working
Paper Series No. 2. Washington, D.C.: World Bank http://www.proventionconsortium.org/files/dominica.pdf
Clay, Edward J., Louise Bohn, Enrique
Blanco de Armas, Singand Kabambe and Hardwick Tchale. 2003.
'Malawi and
Southern Africa Climatic Variability and Economic Performance'.
Disaster Risk Management Working Paper Series 7. Washington,
D.C.: World Bank. http://www.proventionconsortium.org/files/malawi.pdf
Benson, C. and Edward J. Clay. 1998.
'The impact of drought on Sub-Saharan African economies:
a preliminary examination'. World Bank Technical Paper 401.
Washington, D.C. : World Bank.
Clay, Edward, Christine Barrow,
Charlotte Benson, Jim Dempster, Nita Pillai and John Seaman.
1999. 'An evaluation of HMG's response to the Montserrat
volcanic emergency'. 2 Vols. Evaluation Report EV635. London:
Department for International Development.
Tom Crowards. 2000. 'Comparative
Vulnerability to Natural Disasters in the Caribbean'. Staff
Working Paper No. 1/00. Caribbean Development Bank, Bridgetown,
Barbados
Albala-Bertrand, J. M. 1993.
The political economy of large natural disasters with special
reference to developing countries. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Edward Clay
12 May 2004
We are grateful to DFID for funding this meeting.