Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side
In most countries, the private sector owns the vast majority of the buildings and a considerable portion of the infrastructure at risk. However, most investment in disaster risk management is made by the public sector, with the private sector laggi...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/04/26213110/capturing-co-benefits-disaster-risk-management-private-sector-side http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24208 |
id |
okr-10986-24208 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
EQUITY IMPLICATIONS MONETARY POLICY CAPITAL MARKETS UNEMPLOYMENT RATES SUBSTITUTION ECONOMIC GROWTH TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS GREENHOUSE GASES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION MULTIPLIERS CARBON INCOME POWER STATIONS PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE STORMS ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES INTEREST RATE PROPERTY RIGHTS DISCOUNT RATE TIMBER RESOURCE ALLOCATION EMISSIONS COST‐BENEFIT ANALYSIS REVENUES ENVIRONMENTAL DECISIONS COST‐SAVINGS INSURANCE POLICIES INCENTIVES EQUILIBRIUM ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION MODELS CAPITAL MARKETS DAMAGES PRICE MARKET FAILURE COMMON GOOD SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAX REDUCTION HURRICANES ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY PRESENT VALUE ELECTRIC UTILITIES EXPLOITATION UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OIL TRADEOFFS DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DECISION‐MAKING NATURAL CAPITAL REBATES NATURAL CAPITAL REPLACEMENT COSTS OPTIONS EXTERNALITIES DEBT CARBON TAXES MARKETS POLLUTION BENEFIT ANALYSIS IMPORTS TAX REVENUES DIVIDENDS SUBSIDIES FINANCE EFFICIENCY FISHING GREENHOUSE GASES TAXES NO‐REGRETS STRATEGY INVESTMENT DECISIONS MARKET INTEREST RATE CLIMATE VARIABILITY RESOURCES RE‐INSURANCE ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE UNEMPLOYMENT EQUITY BENEFIT‐COST ANALYSIS BENEFIT‐COST ANALYSIS MARKET PRICES POLICIES CLIMATE CHANGE ENVIRONMENTAL GOODS ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT VALUES MARKET PRICES VALUE COST‐EFFECTIVENESS POLICY MAKERS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT NO‐REGRETS STRATEGY CREDIT EXTREME EVENTS CLIMATE DEMAND ABATEMENT SUSTAINABLE GROWTH FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS ENVIRONMENTS EXPENDITURES PROPERTY PRIVATE GOODS COMMON PROPERTY RESOURCES ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE ENERGY USE ENVIRONMENT MARKET FOREIGN EXCHANGE FINANCIAL LOSSES POLICY ECONOMICS COMMON PROPERTY ENERGY EFFICIENCY INSURANCE FISHERIES COMMON PROPERTY RESOURCES TRADE POLLUTION TAXES LAND TRANSFER PAYMENTS INCENTIVE SYSTEMS DRINKING WATER HURRICANE PUBLIC PARTICIPATION ALLOCATION SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUPPLY SPILLOVER EFFECTS REVENUE POLLUTION CONTROL EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE NO‐REGRETS” STRATEGY INVESTMENTS RISK MANAGEMENT OFFSETS SUSTAINABLE GROWTH RISK MANAGEMENT ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS RISK AVERSION EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE PROFITS ENVIRONMENTAL PUBLIC GOOD WETLANDS LAND‐USE COST ANALYSIS POLLUTION TAXES HAZARDOUS WASTES PRICES NEGATIVE EXTERNALITIES PUBLIC GOODS PRODUCTION COSTS BENEFITS COMMERCIAL FISHING ECONOMIES ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVE ADVERSE SELECTION PUBLIC GOODS |
spellingShingle |
EQUITY IMPLICATIONS MONETARY POLICY CAPITAL MARKETS UNEMPLOYMENT RATES SUBSTITUTION ECONOMIC GROWTH TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS GREENHOUSE GASES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION MULTIPLIERS CARBON INCOME POWER STATIONS PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE STORMS ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES INTEREST RATE PROPERTY RIGHTS DISCOUNT RATE TIMBER RESOURCE ALLOCATION EMISSIONS COST‐BENEFIT ANALYSIS REVENUES ENVIRONMENTAL DECISIONS COST‐SAVINGS INSURANCE POLICIES INCENTIVES EQUILIBRIUM ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION MODELS CAPITAL MARKETS DAMAGES PRICE MARKET FAILURE COMMON GOOD SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAX REDUCTION HURRICANES ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY PRESENT VALUE ELECTRIC UTILITIES EXPLOITATION UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OIL TRADEOFFS DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DECISION‐MAKING NATURAL CAPITAL REBATES NATURAL CAPITAL REPLACEMENT COSTS OPTIONS EXTERNALITIES DEBT CARBON TAXES MARKETS POLLUTION BENEFIT ANALYSIS IMPORTS TAX REVENUES DIVIDENDS SUBSIDIES FINANCE EFFICIENCY FISHING GREENHOUSE GASES TAXES NO‐REGRETS STRATEGY INVESTMENT DECISIONS MARKET INTEREST RATE CLIMATE VARIABILITY RESOURCES RE‐INSURANCE ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE UNEMPLOYMENT EQUITY BENEFIT‐COST ANALYSIS BENEFIT‐COST ANALYSIS MARKET PRICES POLICIES CLIMATE CHANGE ENVIRONMENTAL GOODS ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT VALUES MARKET PRICES VALUE COST‐EFFECTIVENESS POLICY MAKERS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT NO‐REGRETS STRATEGY CREDIT EXTREME EVENTS CLIMATE DEMAND ABATEMENT SUSTAINABLE GROWTH FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS ENVIRONMENTS EXPENDITURES PROPERTY PRIVATE GOODS COMMON PROPERTY RESOURCES ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE ENERGY USE ENVIRONMENT MARKET FOREIGN EXCHANGE FINANCIAL LOSSES POLICY ECONOMICS COMMON PROPERTY ENERGY EFFICIENCY INSURANCE FISHERIES COMMON PROPERTY RESOURCES TRADE POLLUTION TAXES LAND TRANSFER PAYMENTS INCENTIVE SYSTEMS DRINKING WATER HURRICANE PUBLIC PARTICIPATION ALLOCATION SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUPPLY SPILLOVER EFFECTS REVENUE POLLUTION CONTROL EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE NO‐REGRETS” STRATEGY INVESTMENTS RISK MANAGEMENT OFFSETS SUSTAINABLE GROWTH RISK MANAGEMENT ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS RISK AVERSION EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE PROFITS ENVIRONMENTAL PUBLIC GOOD WETLANDS LAND‐USE COST ANALYSIS POLLUTION TAXES HAZARDOUS WASTES PRICES NEGATIVE EXTERNALITIES PUBLIC GOODS PRODUCTION COSTS BENEFITS COMMERCIAL FISHING ECONOMIES ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVE ADVERSE SELECTION PUBLIC GOODS Rose, Adam Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7634 |
description |
In most countries, the private sector
owns the vast majority of the buildings and a considerable
portion of the infrastructure at risk. However, most
investment in disaster risk management is made by the public
sector, with the private sector lagging far behind. The
situation represents missed opportunities for businesses to
capture not only higher levels of the direct benefits of
disaster risk management, but also a broader set of
co-benefits to themselves and society as a whole. These
co-benefits include ways of lowering production costs,
improving the health of workers, and contributing to general
economic stability. Ironically, many of these co-benefits
are more tangible and immediate than ordinary disaster risk
management benefits, which may not appear until a disaster
has struck many years after the investment has been made.
This study analyzes several important facets of private
sector investment in disaster risk management, primarily
from an economic perspective. It is intended as a first step
toward promoting greater investment in disaster risk
management by identifying potential co-benefits, explaining
why they are not always pursued, and suggesting ways to
integrate them into private sector decision-making. The
latter includes government incentives, justified on the
grounds that many private sector investments have extensive
co-benefits, many of which pay dividends to society as a whole. |
format |
Working Paper |
author |
Rose, Adam |
author_facet |
Rose, Adam |
author_sort |
Rose, Adam |
title |
Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side |
title_short |
Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side |
title_full |
Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side |
title_fullStr |
Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side |
title_full_unstemmed |
Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side |
title_sort |
capturing the co-benefits of disaster risk management on the private sector side |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/04/26213110/capturing-co-benefits-disaster-risk-management-private-sector-side http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24208 |
_version_ |
1764455932404695040 |
spelling |
okr-10986-242082021-04-23T14:04:20Z Capturing the Co-Benefits of Disaster Risk Management on the Private Sector Side Rose, Adam EQUITY IMPLICATIONS MONETARY POLICY CAPITAL MARKETS UNEMPLOYMENT RATES SUBSTITUTION ECONOMIC GROWTH TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS GREENHOUSE GASES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION MULTIPLIERS CARBON INCOME POWER STATIONS PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE STORMS ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES INTEREST RATE PROPERTY RIGHTS DISCOUNT RATE TIMBER RESOURCE ALLOCATION EMISSIONS COST‐BENEFIT ANALYSIS REVENUES ENVIRONMENTAL DECISIONS COST‐SAVINGS INSURANCE POLICIES INCENTIVES EQUILIBRIUM ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION MODELS CAPITAL MARKETS DAMAGES PRICE MARKET FAILURE COMMON GOOD SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAX REDUCTION HURRICANES ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY PRESENT VALUE ELECTRIC UTILITIES EXPLOITATION UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OIL TRADEOFFS DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DECISION‐MAKING NATURAL CAPITAL REBATES NATURAL CAPITAL REPLACEMENT COSTS OPTIONS EXTERNALITIES DEBT CARBON TAXES MARKETS POLLUTION BENEFIT ANALYSIS IMPORTS TAX REVENUES DIVIDENDS SUBSIDIES FINANCE EFFICIENCY FISHING GREENHOUSE GASES TAXES NO‐REGRETS STRATEGY INVESTMENT DECISIONS MARKET INTEREST RATE CLIMATE VARIABILITY RESOURCES RE‐INSURANCE ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE UNEMPLOYMENT EQUITY BENEFIT‐COST ANALYSIS BENEFIT‐COST ANALYSIS MARKET PRICES POLICIES CLIMATE CHANGE ENVIRONMENTAL GOODS ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT VALUES MARKET PRICES VALUE COST‐EFFECTIVENESS POLICY MAKERS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT NO‐REGRETS STRATEGY CREDIT EXTREME EVENTS CLIMATE DEMAND ABATEMENT SUSTAINABLE GROWTH FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS ENVIRONMENTS EXPENDITURES PROPERTY PRIVATE GOODS COMMON PROPERTY RESOURCES ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE ENERGY USE ENVIRONMENT MARKET FOREIGN EXCHANGE FINANCIAL LOSSES POLICY ECONOMICS COMMON PROPERTY ENERGY EFFICIENCY INSURANCE FISHERIES COMMON PROPERTY RESOURCES TRADE POLLUTION TAXES LAND TRANSFER PAYMENTS INCENTIVE SYSTEMS DRINKING WATER HURRICANE PUBLIC PARTICIPATION ALLOCATION SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUPPLY SPILLOVER EFFECTS REVENUE POLLUTION CONTROL EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE NO‐REGRETS” STRATEGY INVESTMENTS RISK MANAGEMENT OFFSETS SUSTAINABLE GROWTH RISK MANAGEMENT ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS RISK AVERSION EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE PROFITS ENVIRONMENTAL PUBLIC GOOD WETLANDS LAND‐USE COST ANALYSIS POLLUTION TAXES HAZARDOUS WASTES PRICES NEGATIVE EXTERNALITIES PUBLIC GOODS PRODUCTION COSTS BENEFITS COMMERCIAL FISHING ECONOMIES ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVE ADVERSE SELECTION PUBLIC GOODS In most countries, the private sector owns the vast majority of the buildings and a considerable portion of the infrastructure at risk. However, most investment in disaster risk management is made by the public sector, with the private sector lagging far behind. The situation represents missed opportunities for businesses to capture not only higher levels of the direct benefits of disaster risk management, but also a broader set of co-benefits to themselves and society as a whole. These co-benefits include ways of lowering production costs, improving the health of workers, and contributing to general economic stability. Ironically, many of these co-benefits are more tangible and immediate than ordinary disaster risk management benefits, which may not appear until a disaster has struck many years after the investment has been made. This study analyzes several important facets of private sector investment in disaster risk management, primarily from an economic perspective. It is intended as a first step toward promoting greater investment in disaster risk management by identifying potential co-benefits, explaining why they are not always pursued, and suggesting ways to integrate them into private sector decision-making. The latter includes government incentives, justified on the grounds that many private sector investments have extensive co-benefits, many of which pay dividends to society as a whole. 2016-05-04T17:39:50Z 2016-05-04T17:39:50Z 2016-04 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/04/26213110/capturing-co-benefits-disaster-risk-management-private-sector-side http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24208 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7634 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper |