A Demand-Side Inoperability Input–Output Model for Strategic Risk Management: Insight from the COVID-19 Outbreak in Shanghai, China
-
Published:2023-02-22
Issue:5
Volume:15
Page:4003
-
ISSN:2071-1050
-
Container-title:Sustainability
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Sustainability
Author:
Jin Jian1ORCID,
Zhou Haoran1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. School of Economics, Hebei University, Baoding 071002, China
Abstract
This paper proposes the dynamic inoperability input–output model (DIIM) to analyze the economic impact of COVID-19 in Shanghai in the first quarter of 2022. Based on the input–output model, the DIIM model introduces the sector elasticity coefficient, assesses the economic loss of the system and the influence of disturbances on other sectors through sectoral dependence, and simulates the inoperability and economic loss changes through time series. A multi-evaluation examination of the results reveals that the degree of inoperability of sub-sectors is inconsistent with the ranking of economic losses and that it is hard to quantify the impact of each sector directly. Different from the traditional DIIM model that only considers the negative part of the disaster, the innovation of this paper is that the negative value of the inoperability degree is used to measure the indirect positive growth of sectors under the impact of the Shanghai pandemic shock. At the same time, policymakers need to consider multi-objective optimization when making risk management decisions. This study uses surrogate worth trade-off to construct a multi-objective risk management framework to expand the DIIM model to enable policymakers to quantify the trade-off between economic benefit and investment costs when making risk management decisions.
Funder
National Social Science Foundation of China “Research on mixed methods and models of multi-source heterogeneous traditional Chinese medicine big data analysis” under Grant
National Statistical Science Research Project of China “Analysis of Macroeconomic Effects of China’s Traditional Chinese Medicine Industry Based on Input–Output Methodology” under Grant
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development,Building and Construction
Reference48 articles.
1. Municipal Bureau of Statistics of Shanghai (2023, January 09). Shanghai’s GDP in the First Half of 2022, Available online: https://tjj.sh.gov.cn/ydsj2/20220719/cb29bc2eb997465faddc45e59ab31cf6.html.
2. Cochrane, H.C. (1974). Social Science Perspectives on the Coming San Francisco Earthquake, Natural Hazards Research Paper, Institute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado.
3. Informing climate adaptation: A review of the economic costs of natural disasters;Kousky;Energy Econ.,2014
4. Do natural disasters promote long-run growth?;Skidmore;Econ. Inq.,2002
5. Haimes, Y.Y. (2005). Risk Modeling, Assessment, and Management, John Wiley & Sons.
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献