Title: Economics of Disasters
1Economics of Disasters
2Are Disasters Good for the Economy?
- Directions
- Distribute the clues so that each person is
holding at least one clue. - Clues 1-4 Black Death, 5-8 Spanish Flu,
9-10 Hurricane
Katrina - Share the clues in a round-robin fashion, putting
each clue into one of the following piles - Relevant to solving the problem
- Not helpful in solving the problem
- Not sure
- Answer the question ARE disasters good for the
economy? - Determine the least of clues necessary to
answer the question. - Be prepared to defend your answer clue
selection.
3Are Disasters Good for the Economy?
NO !
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
NO! NO! NO! NO! NO! NO! NO!
4Scarcity IS
- Resources are limited
- Resources are necessary for production
- (output Æ’ resources)
- Disasters increase resource scarcity
- (disasters destroy land, labor /or capital)
- Output must be lower than it would have been had
the disaster not occurred
GDP
5Activity Clue 9 J.P. Morgan senior economist
Anthony Chan "Preliminary estimates indicate
60 percent damage to downtown New Orleans. Plenty
of cleanup work and rebuilding will follow in all
the areas. That means over the next 12 months,
there will be lots of job creation, which is good
for the economy."
HUH?
6- Terminology Measurement
- What do we mean by the economy? 2 options
- output real GDP
- well-being or standard of living real
GDP/capita - or
- economic growth
- increase in real GDP /or real GDP/capita
- ???? Confusion ???? Did he mean level or
rate?
7Level vs. Rate
Real GDP/capital
Real GDP/capital
time
time
8Economic Growth pre post DisasterRate?Level?
trend
QD
Output
D
B
Time
bottom
disaster
9Economic GrowthRate?Level?
trend
QD
Output
D R
Time
disaster recovery
10Economic GrowthRate?Level?When ?
trend
Output
Q
Time
11Economic GrowthRate?Level?When ?
trend
Q
Output
Time
12Economic Growth StimulusNO Evidence for this
Scenario
new trend
old trend
Output
Q
Time
13Activity Clue 9 J.P. Morgan senior economist
Anthony Chan "Preliminary estimates indicate
60 percent damage to downtown New Orleans. Plenty
of cleanup work and rebuilding will follow in all
the areas. That means over the next 12 months,
there will be lots of job creation, which is good
for the economy."
How do we get here ?
14Models Tools of Economic Reasoning
- Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)
x
- Assumptions of the Model
- All resources are used to produce the 2
categories of products on the X and Y axes - At all points on the curve, all resources are
fully employed, given the available technology.
- (we choose from the possibilities)
services
goods
15Models Tools of Economic Reasoning
- Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)
- Assumptions of the Model
- Technological improvements or the discovery of
new resources makes more production possible.
The curve moves out, to the right. - Destruction of resources or technology makes less
production possible the curve moves in and
down, to the left.
services
goods
16Productivity output per unit of input
Æ’ human capital, physical capital
- skills talents
- education
- training
- buildings
- machines tools
- technology
17Labor Productivity output per person-hour
Æ’ availability of capital
pop. growth
pandemic
Effect of population change in economy with
little capital
18Capital to Labor Ratio
ratio falls
ratio rises
capital-intensive products
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
19ratio falls
ratio rises
capital-intensive products
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
20ratio falls
ratio rises
capital-intensive products
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
21ratio falls
ratio rises
capital-intensive products
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
22ratio falls
ratio rises
capital-intensive products
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
23ratio falls
ratio rises
capital-intensive products
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
24ratio falls
ratio rises
capital-intensive products
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
labor-intensive products
25Are Disasters Good for the Economy?
- NO! NO! NO! NO! NO!
- Resources are destroyed
- Total output ( real GDP) falls
The PPF always shrinks
26Why Might Disasters SEEM To BeGood for the
Economy?
economic well-being - standard of living
(real GDP/capita)
When capital to labor ratios rise, real
GDP/capita may rise even as total real GDP falls
capital-intensive products
labor-intensive products
27- Activity Clue 9
- J.P. Morgan senior economist Anthony Chan
"Preliminary estimates indicate 60 percent damage
to downtown New Orleans. Plenty of cleanup work
and rebuilding will follow in all the areas. That
means over the next 12 months, there will be lots
of job creation, which is good for the economy." - Questions to Ask
- Is this a credible source?
- If so, are the standards for comparison
specified? - (What are you measuring?)
28Frédéric Bastiat
There is only one difference between a bad
economist and a good one the bad economist
confines himself to the visible effect the good
economist takes into account both the effect that
can be seen and those effects that must be
foreseen.
29What Is Seen and What Is Not SeenEconomic
Sophisms, 1845
The Broken Window Fallacy
Suppose James Goodfellows son breaks a window?
30The Broken Window Fallacy
"It's an ill wind that blows nobody some good.
Such accidents keep industry going. Everybody has
to make a living. What would become of the
glaziers if no one ever broke a window?"
31 . . . Suppose that it will cost six francs to
repair the damage. . . . The glazier will come,
do his job, receive six francs, congratulate
himself, and bless in his heart the careless
child. That is what is seen. But if, by way of
deduction, you conclude, as happens only too
often, that it is good to break windows, that it
helps to circulate money, that it results in
encouraging industry in general, I am obliged to
cry out That will never do! Your theory stops at
what is seen. It does not take account of what is
not seen.
32It is not seen that if he had not had a
windowpane to replace, he would have replaced,
for example, his worn-out shoes or added another
book to his library. Let us next consider
industry in general. The window having been
broken, the glass industry gets six francs' worth
of encouragement that is what is seen. If the
window had not been broken, the shoe industry (or
some other) would have received six francs' worth
of encouragement that is what is not seen.
33Frédéric Bastiat
. . . Destruction is not profitable.
34He Should Know Better
"Ghastly as it may seem to say this, the terror
attack . . . could do some economic good." . .
. destruction will stimulate the economy through
business investment in rebuilding .
Paul Krugman, Princeton University
New York Times, Sept.
14, 2001
Bastiat Hasnt Been Forgotten
We know this has to be fishy just by asking
Would there have been even greater "economic
good" had the terrorists succeeded in destroying
buildings in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago,
Philadelphia, Boston and all other major cities?
Of course, you and I know that is utter nonsense.
Property destruction always lowers the wealth of
a nation. I hope one of Krugman's students asks
him, "If property destruction is good for the
economy, why aren't Beirut and Belfast boom
towns? Walter Williams, George Mason
University http//www.jewishwo
rldreview.com/cols/williams100401.asp
35"If property destruction is good for the economy,
why aren't Beirut and Belfast boom towns?
36Are Disasters Good for the Economy?
1. How do we measure non-tangible human loss?
37Are Disasters Good for the Economy?
2. How do we measure what might-have-been?
Disaster casualties immediate AND future losses
Unrealized potential
38Over ???? population
39Julian Simon
Paul Ehrlich
40The Ultimate Resource Is Human Intelligence in
a Free Society
Julian Simon
The . . . more people there are, the more
minds that are working to discover new sources
and increase productivity. . . .
41Knowledge Productivity
- The source of . . . improvements in productivity
is the human mind, and a human mind is seldom
found apart from a human body. And because
improvements their invention and their adoption
come from people, the amount of improvement
plainly depends on the number of people available
to use their minds. - (Simon, The Ultimate Resource 2, 372)
42Productivity Population
- The data show clearly that the bigger the
population of a country, the greater the number
of scientists and the larger the amount of
scientific knowledge produced more specifically
. . . scientific output is proportional to
population size, in countries at the same level
of income. - (Simon, The Ultimate Resource 2, 380, 385)
43Not Just Rocket Science . . .
. . . The main contribution that additional
persons make to society is the new knowledge of
all kinds scientific, organizational, and
everyday knowledge . . . that they create and
leave behind them. And to repeat an earlier
statement, these gains are the result not only of
geniuses but of a real number of work-a-day
ingenious people. (Simon, Ultimate Resource 2,
380 385)
44Not Everyone Is Hurt By Disasters
Fallacy of Composition To erroneously assume
that what is true of the whole is true of an
individual
Economic change creates winners and losers.
45And the Winners Are . . .