In this dissertation, I explore the financial mechanisms available to individuals and governments after a disaster in developing countries, using Mexico as a case study. Specifically, I explore the role of fiscal federalism, remittances, migration, access to financial services, and catastrophe bonds. Across these dimensions, I focus on the effects of hurricanes and earthquakes, as these have been the costliest hazards for Mexico.
First, I estimate the effects of natural disasters on municipal revenues and expenditures. I find that the current fiscal rules disincentivize municipalities from collecting more taxes or reallocating funds to implement post-disaster policies. Additionally, state-level officials do not appear to follow federal criteria when distributing federal transfers to municipalities in the aftermath of a disaster.
Second, I test whether remittances to the affected region are filling the gap left by the lack of government response. Overall, the findings reveal that remittance levels decrease after a municipality has been hit by an earthquake or both earthquakes and hurricanes. I further test whether this decline is driven by access to financial services or migration. My results suggest that the affected agents migrate after a disaster to smooth consumption. Third, I propose a comprehensive policy evaluation framework to evaluate risk-financing tools. Then, I illustrate this policy framework using the Mexican CAT bonds program as a case study. The results reveal that the Mexican CAT bonds program performs well against the criteria of the input evaluation stage.
However, my results suggest that the program could be adjusted to improve its performance relative to the process/product evaluation criteria.
Based on this work, there are two potentially important future research areas. First, improve the understanding of the underlying mechanisms that explain changes in the spending priorities to identify leverage points for policy improvements in the fiscal federalism and disaster response systems. Second, identify damage drivers and use them to estimate both the marginal effects of disasters based on their intensity and to improve the triggering parameters of Mexican CAT bonds.
Further exploring these research streams is particularly relevant in a future where the frequency and magnitude of natural hazards are expected to increase.
相关报告
劲爆!154页微软GPT研究报告(全中文版)
2.4w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2023-03
标签:微软、GPT)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
元宇宙,下一个“生态级”科技主线-20210908-66页
2.2w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2021-09
标签:元宇宙、科技)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
100大产业链全景图
2.0w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2021-03
标签:产业链)
语言:中文
金额:免费
北京大学-2022年元宇宙全球年度报告(202页干货)
1.9w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2022-01
标签:元宇宙、年度报告)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
预见2023-中国行业趋势报告
1.7w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2023-01
标签:预见、行业、趋势)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
短视频行业深度研究系列:快手、抖音、视频号对比,竞争趋紧,运营体系成关键-20210302-46页
1.7w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2021-03
标签:短视频、快手、抖音、视频号)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
2021中国跨境电商发展报告
1.5w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2021-04
标签:中国、跨境电商)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
生物医药的投资逻辑、主要赛道及案例分析-20210626
1.4w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2021-09
标签:生物医药、投资逻辑、行业概览)
语言:中文
金额:免费
温铁军科研团队:农业4.0与乡村振兴战略-2021.05
1.4w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2021-05
标签:农业4.0、乡村振兴)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
清华-人工智能发展报告(2011-2020)
1.3w+
类型:行研
上传时间:2021-01
标签:人工智能、发展)
语言:中文
金额:5积分
积分充值
30积分
6.00元
90积分
18.00元
150+8积分
30.00元
340+20积分
68.00元
640+50积分
128.00元
990+70积分
198.00元
1640+140积分
328.00元
微信支付
余额支付
积分充值
应付金额:
0 元
请登录,再发表你的看法
登录/注册