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Eric Strobl
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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
The Review of Economics and Statistics (2011) 93 (2): 575–589.
Published: 01 May 2011
Abstract
View articletitled, The Economic Growth Impact of Hurricanes: Evidence from U.S. Coastal Counties
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for article titled, The Economic Growth Impact of Hurricanes: Evidence from U.S. Coastal Counties
I estimate the impact of hurricane strikes on local economic growth rates. To this end, I assemble a panel data set of U.S. coastal counties' growth rates and construct a novel hurricane destruction index that is based on a monetary loss equation, local wind speed estimates derived from a physical wind field model, and local exposure characteristics. The econometric results suggest that a county's annual economic growth rate falls on average by 0.45 percentage points, 28% of it due to richer individuals moving away from affected counties. I also find that the impact of hurricanes is netted out in annual terms at the state level and does not affect national economic growth rates at all.
Journal Articles
Trends in Rainfall and Economic Growth in Africa: A Neglected Cause of the African Growth Tragedy
UnavailablePublisher: Journals Gateway
The Review of Economics and Statistics (2010) 92 (2): 350–366.
Published: 01 May 2010
Abstract
View articletitled, Trends in Rainfall and Economic Growth in Africa: A Neglected Cause of the African Growth Tragedy
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for article titled, Trends in Rainfall and Economic Growth in Africa: A Neglected Cause of the African Growth Tragedy
We examine the role of rainfall trends in poor growth performance of sub-Saharan African nations relative to other developing countries, using a new cross-country panel climatic data set in an empirical economic growth framework. Our results show that rainfall has been a significant determinant of poor economic growth for African nations but not for other countries. Depending on the benchmark measure of potential rainfall, we estimate that the direct impact under the scenario of no decline in rainfall would have resulted in a reduction of between around 15% and 40% of today's gap in African GDP per capita relative to the rest of the developing world.
Journal Articles
Grant Support and Exporting Activity
UnavailablePublisher: Journals Gateway
The Review of Economics and Statistics (2008) 90 (1): 168–174.
Published: 01 February 2008
Abstract
View articletitled, Grant Support and Exporting Activity
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for article titled, Grant Support and Exporting Activity
This paper investigates whether government support can act to increase exporting activity. We use a uniquely rich data set on Irish manufacturing plants and employ an empirical strategy that combines a nonparametric matching procedure with a difference-in-differences estimator in order to deal with the potential selection problem inherent in the analysis. Our results suggest that if grants are large enough, they can encourage already exporting firms to compete more effectively on the international market. However, there is little evidence that grants encourage nonexporters to start exporting.