The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra

In June 2015, about 53,000 people were affected by unusually severe floods in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area, Ghana. The real impact of such a disaster is a product of exposure ("Who was affected?"), vulnerability ("How much did...

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Main Authors: Erman, Alvina, Motte, Elliot, Goyal, Radhika, Asare, Akosua, Takamatsu, Shinya, Chen, Xiaomeng, Malgioglio, Silvia, Skinner, Alexander, Yoshida, Nobuo, Hallegatte, Stephane
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/264651528401990188/The-road-to-recovery-the-role-of-poverty-in-the-exposure-vulnerability-and-resilience-to-floods-in-Accra
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29898
id okr-10986-29898
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-298982021-06-08T14:42:46Z The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra Erman, Alvina Motte, Elliot Goyal, Radhika Asare, Akosua Takamatsu, Shinya Chen, Xiaomeng Malgioglio, Silvia Skinner, Alexander Yoshida, Nobuo Hallegatte, Stephane FLOODS POVERTY RESILIENCE VULNERABILITY NATURAL DISASTERS COPING STRATEGIES INVESTMENT ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT In June 2015, about 53,000 people were affected by unusually severe floods in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area, Ghana. The real impact of such a disaster is a product of exposure ("Who was affected?"), vulnerability ("How much did the affected households lose?"), and socioeconomic resilience ("What was their ability to cope and recover?"). This study explores these three dimensions to assess whether poor people were disproportionally affected by the 2015 floods. It reaches four main conclusions. (1) In the studied area, there is no difference in annual expenditures between the households who were affected and those who were not affected by the flood. (2) Poorer households lost less than their richer neighbors in absolute terms, but more when compared with their annual expenditure level, and poorer households are over-represented among the most severely affected households. (3) More than 30 percent of the affected households report not having recovered two years after the shock, and the ability of households to recover was driven by the magnitude of their losses, sources of income, and access to coping mechanisms, but not by their poverty, as measured by the annual expenditure level. (4) There is a measurable effect of the flood on behaviors, under-mining savings and investment in enterprises. The study concludes with two policy implications. First, flood management could be considered as a component of the poverty-reduction strategy in the city. Second, building resilience is not only about increasing income. It also requires providing the population with coping and recovery mechanisms such as financial instruments. A flood management program needs to be designed to target low-resilience households, such as those with little access to coping and recovery mechanisms, even those who are not living in poverty before the shock. 2018-06-19T15:09:12Z 2018-06-19T15:09:12Z 2018-06 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/264651528401990188/The-road-to-recovery-the-role-of-poverty-in-the-exposure-vulnerability-and-resilience-to-floods-in-Accra http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29898 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8469 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 Africa Ghana
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic FLOODS
POVERTY
RESILIENCE
VULNERABILITY
NATURAL DISASTERS
COPING STRATEGIES
INVESTMENT
ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle FLOODS
POVERTY
RESILIENCE
VULNERABILITY
NATURAL DISASTERS
COPING STRATEGIES
INVESTMENT
ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT
Erman, Alvina
Motte, Elliot
Goyal, Radhika
Asare, Akosua
Takamatsu, Shinya
Chen, Xiaomeng
Malgioglio, Silvia
Skinner, Alexander
Yoshida, Nobuo
Hallegatte, Stephane
The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra
geographic_facet Africa
Ghana
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8469
description In June 2015, about 53,000 people were affected by unusually severe floods in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area, Ghana. The real impact of such a disaster is a product of exposure ("Who was affected?"), vulnerability ("How much did the affected households lose?"), and socioeconomic resilience ("What was their ability to cope and recover?"). This study explores these three dimensions to assess whether poor people were disproportionally affected by the 2015 floods. It reaches four main conclusions. (1) In the studied area, there is no difference in annual expenditures between the households who were affected and those who were not affected by the flood. (2) Poorer households lost less than their richer neighbors in absolute terms, but more when compared with their annual expenditure level, and poorer households are over-represented among the most severely affected households. (3) More than 30 percent of the affected households report not having recovered two years after the shock, and the ability of households to recover was driven by the magnitude of their losses, sources of income, and access to coping mechanisms, but not by their poverty, as measured by the annual expenditure level. (4) There is a measurable effect of the flood on behaviors, under-mining savings and investment in enterprises. The study concludes with two policy implications. First, flood management could be considered as a component of the poverty-reduction strategy in the city. Second, building resilience is not only about increasing income. It also requires providing the population with coping and recovery mechanisms such as financial instruments. A flood management program needs to be designed to target low-resilience households, such as those with little access to coping and recovery mechanisms, even those who are not living in poverty before the shock.
format Working Paper
author Erman, Alvina
Motte, Elliot
Goyal, Radhika
Asare, Akosua
Takamatsu, Shinya
Chen, Xiaomeng
Malgioglio, Silvia
Skinner, Alexander
Yoshida, Nobuo
Hallegatte, Stephane
author_facet Erman, Alvina
Motte, Elliot
Goyal, Radhika
Asare, Akosua
Takamatsu, Shinya
Chen, Xiaomeng
Malgioglio, Silvia
Skinner, Alexander
Yoshida, Nobuo
Hallegatte, Stephane
author_sort Erman, Alvina
title The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra
title_short The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra
title_full The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra
title_fullStr The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra
title_full_unstemmed The Road to Recovery : The Role of Poverty in the Exposure, Vulnerability and Resilience to Floods in Accra
title_sort road to recovery : the role of poverty in the exposure, vulnerability and resilience to floods in accra
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/264651528401990188/The-road-to-recovery-the-role-of-poverty-in-the-exposure-vulnerability-and-resilience-to-floods-in-Accra
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29898
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