Introduction to special issue: The economics of catastrophes

IF 1.2 4区 经济学 Q3 ECONOMICS Australian Economic Papers Pub Date : 2024-03-06 DOI:10.1111/1467-8454.12333
Markus Brueckner
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Freebairn argues that subsidies for flood-affected households can unintentionally discourage individuals from relocating to safer areas while also reducing incentives for implementing disaster mitigation strategies. As a result of subsidies, the costs of future disaster events to society may increase while contributing to inequity over the long term. It is important to note that Freebairn's argument applies to subsidies that are granted in case of expected natural disasters: that is, to people living in areas which are well-known to have a non-zero probability of being struck by major floods.</p><p>‘Catastrophe theory and economic modelling at the back of an envelope’ by Eduardo Pol (<span>2024</span>) provides a detailed examination of the application of catastrophe theory (CT) in economic modelling. Pol outlines a step-by-step process of how to use CT in economic modelling. Pol addresses prior critiques of CT's limited relevance in economic modelling. He discusses how CT combines optimisation, comparative statics, and dynamics into a single mathematical tool and gives a systematic procedure for its application in economics.</p><p>The paper ‘How Australia's economy gained momentum because of Covid-19’ by Pierre Rostan and Alexandra Rostan (<span>2024</span>) provides an insightful exploration into the economic impact of Covid-19 on Australia. Leveraging spectral analysis forecasting, the authors delve into the Australian Government's response to the pandemic, which included support for both employers and individuals. A key focus of the paper is the resilience of Australia's economy during the crisis. The authors examined the impact of programs such as the JobMaker Hiring Credit scheme and JobKeeper Payment program, which provided a wage subsidy to impacted businesses. The authors find that these programs, which constituted an expenditure of an estimated AUD 311 billion, were instrumental in keeping Australia's real GDP growth rate in positive territory beyond the first quarter of 2023.</p><p>‘Australia's gambling epidemic: The role of Covid-19 support payment’ by Opoku Adabor (<span>2024</span>) analyses the influence of Covid-19 support funds on the severity of gambling in Australia. Data from 4622 gamblers in the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey were used. The findings reveal that various Covid-19 support payments such as job seeker's support, quarantine support, and stimulus support payments increased gambling, particularly among male gamblers and online gamblers. The author proposes policy changes, suggesting reducing the amounts of Covid-19 support payments given to gamblers to decrease gambling spending. 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Abstract

According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, the word catastrophe can be traced back to the 1530s when its meaning was ‘reversal of what is expected’ (especially a fatal turning point in a drama, the winding up of the plot)—from Latin catastropha, from Greek katastrophē ‘an overturning; a sudden end’. In contemporary macroeconomic textbooks, the reader will be familiar with the term ‘adverse (or negative) shocks’. Adverse shocks are those events that are unpredictable, that is, cannot be forecasted, and that negatively affect GDP, or its components. Adverse shocks are probably what is most closely related to the etymological meaning of the word catastrophe. This special issue, titled, ‘The Economics of Catastrophes’ brings together the work of leading scholars on the topic. It contains eight papers, five of which are specifically on the Australian economy. The following paragraphs provide a brief summary of each of the papers contained in the special issue.

John Freebairn's paper, titled ‘Natural disasters and economic policy challenges’, evaluates the impacts of natural disasters on economic and policy decisions. Freebairn (2024) proposes that while governmental subsidies for flood-affected households aim to provide immediate relief, such subsidies may inadvertently incentivise lower-income individuals to continue living in more disaster-prone regions—causing long-term negative societal impacts. Freebairn critically evaluates the role governments play in shaping the decisions of households and businesses when opting for locations prone to natural disasters. He deliberates on the provision of special financial subsidies to disaster-affected households and businesses, a decision often influenced by media and political pressures. Freebairn argues that subsidies for flood-affected households can unintentionally discourage individuals from relocating to safer areas while also reducing incentives for implementing disaster mitigation strategies. As a result of subsidies, the costs of future disaster events to society may increase while contributing to inequity over the long term. It is important to note that Freebairn's argument applies to subsidies that are granted in case of expected natural disasters: that is, to people living in areas which are well-known to have a non-zero probability of being struck by major floods.

‘Catastrophe theory and economic modelling at the back of an envelope’ by Eduardo Pol (2024) provides a detailed examination of the application of catastrophe theory (CT) in economic modelling. Pol outlines a step-by-step process of how to use CT in economic modelling. Pol addresses prior critiques of CT's limited relevance in economic modelling. He discusses how CT combines optimisation, comparative statics, and dynamics into a single mathematical tool and gives a systematic procedure for its application in economics.

The paper ‘How Australia's economy gained momentum because of Covid-19’ by Pierre Rostan and Alexandra Rostan (2024) provides an insightful exploration into the economic impact of Covid-19 on Australia. Leveraging spectral analysis forecasting, the authors delve into the Australian Government's response to the pandemic, which included support for both employers and individuals. A key focus of the paper is the resilience of Australia's economy during the crisis. The authors examined the impact of programs such as the JobMaker Hiring Credit scheme and JobKeeper Payment program, which provided a wage subsidy to impacted businesses. The authors find that these programs, which constituted an expenditure of an estimated AUD 311 billion, were instrumental in keeping Australia's real GDP growth rate in positive territory beyond the first quarter of 2023.

‘Australia's gambling epidemic: The role of Covid-19 support payment’ by Opoku Adabor (2024) analyses the influence of Covid-19 support funds on the severity of gambling in Australia. Data from 4622 gamblers in the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey were used. The findings reveal that various Covid-19 support payments such as job seeker's support, quarantine support, and stimulus support payments increased gambling, particularly among male gamblers and online gamblers. The author proposes policy changes, suggesting reducing the amounts of Covid-19 support payments given to gamblers to decrease gambling spending. The study concludes that further research should explore factors mediating the relationship between Covid-19 support payments and gambling, such as lockdown restrictions and price fluctuations.

The paper titled ‘Impact of global macroeconomic factors on spillovers among Australian sector markets: Fresh findings from a wavelet-based analysis’ by Jiang et al. (2024) investigates the relationship between global macroeconomic factors and the spillover dynamics of 10 Australian sectoral indices. The study employs a time-varying parameter vector autoregressive model, wavelet coherence analysis, and wavelet decomposition-based Granger causality to examine data from 14 May 2007 to 31 March 2022 to identify net transmitters and receivers of stock market spillovers. The results indicate that sectors, such as Industrials, Consumer Discretionary, and Financials, act as net transmitters of spillovers while sectors such as Health, Information Technology, and Utilities, are primarily net receivers. The study shows that the intricate connectedness is time-varying and tends to intensify during periods of marked economic difficulties, such as the Great Recession and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The research demonstrates that global macroeconomic factors, including oil and exchange rates as well as oil volatility, stock market volatility and the Infectious Disease Tracker Index, significantly drive the connectedness of the Australian sectoral indices. The findings furnish valuable insights for investors and policymakers. Investors can be informed by the findings with regard to optimal portfolio design and risk management strategies. Policymakers gain important understandings about the Australian sectors' responses to global influences and volatility, thereby contributing to strategic decision-making in a globally interconnected economic landscape.

‘Hiding the elephant: The tragedy of Covid policies and its economist apologetics’ by Gigi Foster and Paul Frijters (2024) evaluates the costs and benefits of lockdown policies in response to Covid-19. In many countries throughout the world during 2020 and 2021, governments announced lockdown policies. The lockdown policies were enforced by the police. And the majority of people abided by these policies. The striking point made by Foster and Frijters is that, before the lockdown policies were implemented there was no convincing evidence that the benefits from lockdown policies would exceed the costs. The lockdown policies were thus in violation with the Nuremberg code. Ex-post calculations based on the concept of WELLBYs suggest that the costs of lockdowns far exceeded their benefits. According to Foster and Frijters, estimates from six different teams across the Anglo-Saxon world indicate that the costs to society as a whole, measured in terms of WELLBYs taken from the whole population, outweighed the benefits of lockdown by a ratio ranging between 4:1 and 1000:1.

The paper ‘The causal effect of political risk on the stock market: Evidence from a natural experiment’ by Li et al. (2024) uses the unexpected Taiwan misfired missile event on 1 July 2016 as an exogenous shock to examine the causal impact of political risk on the stock market. Specifically, the researchers focus on Taiwan-related A-share firms in the Chinese stock market. Their findings indicate that political uncertainty related to Taiwan significantly impacts the stock prices of Taiwan-related A-share firms negatively. This impact is particularly pronounced for firms with a stronger relationship with Taiwan and for non-state-owned enterprises. The negative effects are primarily driven by an increased required rate of return due to heightened political uncertainty. Interestingly, the study finds no support for hypotheses that suggested a deterioration in either operating performance or analyst earnings forecast of Taiwan-related firms following the event. This study extends existing literature by evidencing the substantial influence of political risk on stock market performance, thus advocating for its inclusion in investment strategies and risk assessments by market participants.

‘Risk contagion in financial markets: A systematic review using bibliometric methods’ by Su et al. (2024) presents a comprehensive analysis of studies on financial contagion. The analysis highlights a growing interest in risk contagion studies within unconventional assets, such as cryptocurrencies. The paper also notes an increase in Covid-19 pandemic and financial contagion studies since 2020. The study employs both co-occurrence network and co-citation network analysis. Furthermore, it reveals that the number of theoretical studies remains unbalanced with the count of empirical studies overwhelmingly higher. Most of the reviewed studies focused on volatility spills from banking and equity markets, suggesting that future research could lean more towards investor behaviour and macroeconomic policy coordination.

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特刊导言:灾难经济学
根据《在线词源词典》,"灾难"(catastrophe)一词可追溯到 15 世纪 30 年代,当时它的含义是 "预期的逆转"(尤其是戏剧中的致命转折点,情节的收尾)--源自拉丁文 catastropha,源于希腊文 katastrophē "倾覆;突然结束"。在当代宏观经济教科书中,读者会熟悉 "不利(或负面)冲击 "一词。不利冲击是指那些不可预测的事件,即无法预测的事件,这些事件会对国内生产总值或其组成部分产生负面影响。不利冲击可能与灾难一词的词源含义最为接近。本特刊的标题是 "灾难经济学",汇集了顶尖学者在这一主题上的研究成果。特刊包含八篇论文,其中五篇专门论述澳大利亚经济。约翰-弗里贝恩(John Freebairn)的论文题为《自然灾害与经济政策挑战》,评估了自然灾害对经济和政策决策的影响。Freebairn(2024 年)提出,虽然政府对洪水受灾家庭的补贴旨在提供即时救济,但这种补贴可能会无意中激励低收入者继续居住在更容易受灾的地区,从而造成长期的负面社会影响。Freebairn 批判性地评估了政府在影响家庭和企业选择自然灾害易发地区时所扮演的角色。他探讨了向受灾家庭和企业提供特殊财政补贴的问题,这一决定往往受到媒体和政治压力的影响。Freebairn 认为,为受灾家庭提供补贴可能会无意中阻碍个人搬迁到更安全的地区,同时也会降低实施减灾战略的积极性。补贴的结果是,未来灾害事件给社会造成的成本可能会增加,同时也会造成长期的不公平。值得注意的是,Freebairn 的论点适用于预期自然灾害情况下的补贴:即补贴给居住在众所周知遭受大洪水袭击的概率不为零的地区的人们。Eduardo Pol(2024 年)所著的《信封背面的灾难理论与经济建模》详细研究了灾难理论 (CT) 在经济建模中的应用。Pol 概述了如何在经济建模中逐步使用 CT 的过程。波尔回应了之前对 CT 在经济建模中相关性有限的批评。他讨论了 CT 如何将最优化、比较静力学和动力学结合成一个数学工具,并给出了将其应用于经济学的系统程序。皮埃尔-罗斯坦和亚历山德拉-罗斯坦(2024 年)撰写的论文《澳大利亚经济如何因 Covid-19 而获得动力》深入探讨了 Covid-19 对澳大利亚经济的影响。作者利用光谱分析预测技术,深入研究了澳大利亚政府对这一流行病的应对措施,其中包括对雇主和个人的支持。本文的一个重点是澳大利亚经济在危机期间的恢复能力。作者研究了 "创造就业者雇佣信贷计划"(JobMaker Hiring Credit scheme)和 "工作保持者支付计划"(JobKeeper Payment program)等计划的影响,这些计划为受影响的企业提供工资补贴。作者发现,这些计划的支出约为 3110 亿澳元,有助于使澳大利亚的实际 GDP 增长率在 2023 年第一季度之后保持正增长:Opoku Adabor(2024 年)撰写的《澳大利亚的赌博流行病:Covid-19 支持付款的作用》分析了 Covid-19 支持基金对澳大利亚赌博严重程度的影响。研究使用了澳大利亚家庭、收入和劳动力动态调查中 4622 名赌博者的数据。研究结果表明,各种 Covid-19 支持金,如求职者支持金、隔离支持金和刺激支持金都会增加赌博,尤其是男性赌徒和网络赌徒。作者提出了政策改革建议,建议减少向赌博者发放的 Covid-19 支持金的金额,以减少赌博支出。该研究得出结论认为,进一步的研究应探讨Covid-19支持金与赌博之间的中介因素,如锁定限制和价格波动:Jiang 等人(2024 年)撰写的题为《全球宏观经济因素对澳大利亚行业市场溢出效应的影响:基于小波分析的新发现》的论文研究了全球宏观经济因素与澳大利亚 10 个行业指数溢出动态之间的关系。 本研究采用时变参数向量自回归模型、小波相干性分析和基于小波分解的格兰杰因果关系来检验 2007 年 5 月 14 日至 2022 年 3 月 31 日的数据,以确定股市溢出效应的净传递者和接收者。研究结果表明,工业、消费品和金融等行业是溢出效应的净传递者,而健康、信息技术和公用事业等行业则主要是净接受者。研究表明,错综复杂的关联性是随时间变化的,在经济明显困难时期,如经济大衰退和目前的 COVID-19 大流行病,关联性往往会增强。研究表明,全球宏观经济因素,包括石油和汇率以及石油波动性、股市波动性和传染病追踪指数,在很大程度上推动了澳大利亚行业指数的关联性。研究结果为投资者和政策制定者提供了宝贵的见解。投资者可以从研究结果中了解最佳投资组合设计和风险管理策略。政策制定者可以从中了解澳大利亚各行业对全球影响和波动的重要反应,从而有助于在全球相互关联的经济环境中做出战略决策:吉吉-福斯特(Gigi Foster)和保罗-弗里耶特斯(Paul Frijters)(2024 年)撰写的《Covid 政策的悲剧及其经济学家的辩护》评估了应对 Covid-19 的封锁政策的成本和收益。2020 年和 2021 年期间,世界上许多国家的政府都宣布了封锁政策。封锁政策由警方执行。大多数人都遵守了这些政策。福斯特和弗里耶特斯提出的惊人观点是,在实施封锁政策之前,没有令人信服的证据表明封锁政策的收益会超过成本。因此,封锁政策违反了纽伦堡法典。基于 WELLBYs 概念的事后计算表明,封锁的成本远远超过其收益。根据 Foster 和 Frijters 的研究,来自盎格鲁-撒克逊世界的六个不同团队的估算结果表明,以整个人口的 WELLBYs 来衡量,整个社会的成本超过了封锁的收益,其比例在 4:1 到 1000:1 之间:Li等人(2024)的论文《政治风险对股市的因果效应:来自自然实验的证据》以2016年7月1日台湾误射导弹的突发事件作为外生冲击,考察了政治风险对股市的因果影响。具体而言,研究者关注的是中国股市中与台湾相关的 A 股公司。研究结果表明,与台湾相关的政治不确定性会对涉台 A 股公司的股票价格产生显著的负面影响。这种影响对于与台湾关系较密切的企业和非国有企业尤为明显。造成负面影响的主要原因是政治不确定性增加导致要求回报率上升。有趣的是,研究没有发现任何假设支持涉台企业在事件发生后经营业绩或分析师盈利预测恶化的说法。本研究扩展了现有文献,证明了政治风险对股市表现的重大影响,因此主张将其纳入市场参与者的投资策略和风险评估中:Su等人(2024 年)撰写的《金融市场的风险传染:使用文献计量学方法的系统回顾》对有关金融传染的研究进行了全面分析。分析强调,人们对加密货币等非常规资产的风险传染研究越来越感兴趣。论文还指出,自 2020 年以来,Covid-19 大流行病和金融传染研究有所增加。研究采用了共现网络和共引网络分析。此外,研究还显示,理论研究的数量仍然不平衡,而实证研究的数量则占绝大多数。所审查的大多数研究侧重于银行和股票市场的波动溢出,这表明未来的研究可以更多地倾向于投资者行为和宏观经济政策协调。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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3.20
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5.30%
发文量
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期刊介绍: Australian Economic Papers publishes innovative and thought provoking contributions that extend the frontiers of the subject, written by leading international economists in theoretical, empirical and policy economics. Australian Economic Papers is a forum for debate between theorists, econometricians and policy analysts and covers an exceptionally wide range of topics on all the major fields of economics as well as: theoretical and empirical industrial organisation, theoretical and empirical labour economics and, macro and micro policy analysis.
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Issue Information Issue Information Judy Yates and Housing Economics Judy Yates Correction to “Hiding the elephant: The tragedy of COVID policy and its economist apologists”
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