Bite-size Case Study

Hurricane Katrina: measuring disaster impacts

Published on November 29, 2022 Originally recorded 2022   6 min
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The typical data collection that happens on a natural hazard or natural disaster site is these damaged records that give some idea of how many people died or how much monetary losses we had in a certain year in a certain country. Whereas we know that many of these events do not take place at the level of a country, say the United States. Even a disaster that we will talk about in a few minutes, that would be Hurricane Katrina, was a large, catastrophic disaster that happened in the United States but it really happened at the coastline of Louisiana and Mississippi and specifically New Orleans City. Whereas for the entirety of the United States in the work by our Erik Strobl in 2012, we know that this event did not even become visible in the national GDP, for example, of the United States. We know that the events that take place and the impacts that they result in, they take place at a different level than the national level. We need to zoom in, but this is typically very hard because national economic data come at typically the national level collected by census bureaus, statistical bureaus that collect these and put them together to form, for example, gross domestic product. But if we want to look at these impacts, economic impacts at a local level, we would need some similar measure but then at the spatial scale of the disaster, really. In high-income countries that might be available, but in many middle and low-income countries, these granular economic statistics are simply not available and if they are, their quality is heavily debated in the economic literature. We need a way to measure the local economy. If there's no data available, that would be very hard but there is a large literature in economics that has looked into basically a new method of doing this by proxying local economic activity by the use of nighttime lights. These are remotely sensed light emissions that are emitted by humans and we should say by people and their economies. They are captured by satellites from space and the intensity tells us a lot about the number of people that are in a certain place, but also the level of economic activity that is in a place. In a picture of Northern America, we can make some interesting observations already just by looking at a simple picture of nightlights. We know that the East Coast of the United States is heavily populated, whereas it is much less so in the center of the country and at the West Coast we have California lighting up brightly. We can clearly see from the pictures of nightlights that lights are bright where economies are booming and are big and this relation between nightlife and economic activity is what we have taken to the study of natural disasters. We started this project, 6-7 years ago at the time of recording this talk. We were not the only ones, of course. Eric Strobl has done a lot of work in this and there are other authors that have contributed to this literature as our research expanded, and all are making use of the same basic idea. A natural disaster takes place in a certain location where it negatively affects economic activity in the short run with the hypothesis that nightlights should reflect this shock locally. Indeed, many papers that have been published over the past years established this correlation. To dive into that a little deeper, to give you a touch of what that should look like, we will look into a case study.
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Hurricane Katrina: measuring disaster impacts

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