Exact(5)
As our climate continues to change, the number of natural disasters increases, frequently with catastrophic consequences for human settlements.
The results for the interaction between the two forces show (1) as the incidence of disasters increases, the marginal effect of political risk on trade becomes more negative, which indicates a greater decline in trade and (2) as political risk declines the marginal effect of disasters becomes less negative, indicating a smaller decline in trade.
Using a theoretical model, Schumacher and Strobl (2011) showed that economic loss (per capita) due to disasters increases with the size and density of the population in the affected area, and that GDP per capita and its squared value can show statistical significance for loss models.
That figure will continue to grow as the prevalence of natural disasters increases because of climate change.
For instance, FETP residents and graduates have participated first hand in numerous cross-border and global public health investigations or emergency responses related to, for example, natural disasters, increases in non-communicable diseases in developing countries and emerging or re-emerging threats, such as pandemic influenza.
Similar(55)
The statistical results show that the devastated farmland resulting from meteorological disasters increased (either based on the disaster area or the disaster ratio), especially after 1970 (Figure 8a).
With the recent increase in frequency of extreme hydrological events and climate change, the number of natural disasters increased dramatically in Korea.
The impacts of disasters increase the magnitude of preexisting development issues and are not just dependent on the natural hazards that are part of the environment.
Every one unit increase in Place attachment corresponds to the odds of a "household purchased any kind of insurance against natural hazard-induced disasters" increase by a factor of 0.24 (Y5, Model 5).
Overall, the results obtained from the state model further confirm the idea that natural hazard-induced disasters increase income inequality not only for hurricane states (Miljkovic and Miljkovic 2014), but also for many other states across the United States.
Nakamura et al. (2010) concluded that disasters increase uncertainty in consumption growth; more specifically, on an average consumption falls by 30%% in the short run, and by 15%% in the long run.
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