The Long Shadow of a Major Disaster: Modeled Dynamic Impacts of the Hypothetical HayWired Earthquake on California’s Economy

Author:

Sue Wing Ian1ORCID,Rose Adam2ORCID,Wei Dan3ORCID,Wein Anne4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Environment, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA

2. Sol Price School of Public Policy, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

3. Center for Risk and Economic Analysis of Threats and Emergencies, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

4. Western Geographic Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Moffett Field, CA, USA

Abstract

We develop and apply a dynamic economic simulation model to analyze the multi-regional impacts of, and mechanisms of recovery from, a major disaster, the HayWired scenario — a hypothetical Magnitude 7.0 earthquake affecting California’s San Francisco Bay Area. The model integrates loss pathways: capital stock damage, labor supply shocks due to short-term population displacement and longer-run out-migration from damaged areas, and the exacerbating effects of damage to transportation infrastructure capital, as well as various aspects of static and dynamic economic resilience. With input substitution-based static inherent resilience and dynamic resilience in the form of optimal intertemporal and spatial investment allocation, gross output losses range from 0.5 percent to 6 percent across regions, and welfare losses are 0.4 percent statewide but can be ten times as large in hardest-hit areas. Large-scale reconstruction investment is supported by substantial interregional transfers of resources through intra-state trade. Increased output via firms engaging in the key adaptive resilience tactic of production recapture can alleviate a substantial fraction of losses—but only if upstream and downstream barriers to recovery can be lowered quickly.

Funder

U.S. Geological Survey

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Social Sciences,General Environmental Science

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