2020
DOI: 10.1007/s41885-020-00067-y
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The Impact of Hurricanes on Trade and Welfare: Evidence from US Port-level Exports

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Cited by 5 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Combined, this research contributes to the existing literature investigating the linkages between trade and natural disasters and is most closely related to the work by Volpe Martincus and Blyde (2013) and Sytsma (2017Sytsma ( , 2020. The study by Volpe Martincus and Blyde (2013), for example, exploits georeferenced data on the 2010 Chilean earthquake and its impact on the local road network to identify the short-run effect of rising transport costs on trade.…”
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confidence: 79%
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“…Combined, this research contributes to the existing literature investigating the linkages between trade and natural disasters and is most closely related to the work by Volpe Martincus and Blyde (2013) and Sytsma (2017Sytsma ( , 2020. The study by Volpe Martincus and Blyde (2013), for example, exploits georeferenced data on the 2010 Chilean earthquake and its impact on the local road network to identify the short-run effect of rising transport costs on trade.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…While this study produces convincing evidence that transport costs are a significant barrier to trade and negatively impacted by natural disasters, the focus of Volpe Martincus and Blyde (2013) is on the Chilean road network and it's differential impact across local firms, rather than the impact of HK on US port-level trade and the determinants of the ensuing rerouting effect. Relatedly, Sytsma (2017) and Sytsma (2020) explore the US port-level trade effects from US Hurricanes between 2003 and 2015, identified via variation in wind speeds and out-of-state exports, and consider the global welfare implications from the disaster-induced delays of indirectly affected US exports. While Sytsma's findings provide important insights on the implications across the broader US port network and for global consumers, it differs from my analysis in several aspects.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…The Gulf Coast and Atlantic coastline are anticipated to be most significantly affected. For example, for Maintain Supply Chains, hurricanes and tropical storms can affect supply chain operations by imposing temporary costs on consumers and producers through these storms' effects at coastal ports, temporarily delaying the delivery of goods, increasing logistical costs, destroying inventory, and disrupting the distribution of raw materials (Friedt, 2021;Friedt and Crispin, 2021;Sytsma, 2020).…”
Section: Tropical Cyclones and Hurricanesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Supply chains are vulnerable to several climate drivers because of their complicated logistic structure and reliance on coastal transportation infrastructure (Scholz et al, 2021). For instance, flooding of transport systems in the Midwest, tropical cyclone and hurricane damage to coastal ports on the Gulf Coast, and drought and extreme heat causing shipping delays along the Mississippi River waterway have caused disruptions to the flow of goods between producers and consumers (Austin, 2019;English et al, 2021;Friedt, 2021;Friedt and Crispin, 2021;National Integrated Drought Information System, undated;Sytsma, 2020;Trans-Border Global Freight Systems, undated). Generally, these disruptions have been regional and temporary and have had only modest impacts on supply chains at a national level (Friedt, 2021).…”
Section: Synopsismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this way, the local economy is not analysed with respect to a recent level, but rather its longer-term productivity trend. While various regions may be specialised in a certain sector, it appears inappropriate to equate a regional economy with a specific sector (Sweeney, Mordue and Carey, 2020 [7]). Therefore, the discussion on regional resilience is best analysed beyond a region-sectoral view.…”
Section: Resilience Of What To What By What Means and With What Outco...mentioning
confidence: 99%