By Chriss Street
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But even with the their knowledge and relative preparedness for serious tropical storms, no nation could withstand the fury of a storm that reach 230 mile per hour winds. There are approximately 2500 Philippine dead, 20,000 injured and 90% of the structures wiped out across a 500 square miles area. Natural disasters have huge economic impacts, but their aftermath has long term social, economic and political ramifications.
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The
Philippines annually spends an estimated ½% of its total GDP on earthquakes,
volcanos, storms and other natural disasters. Over the last 30 years, the
ongoing annual loss to the $250 billion economy is estimated at 2% of GDP
annually. Despite the fact that the storm came ashore in the impoverished
Eastern Visayas, which contribute only about 2-3% of Philippine GDP each year,
almost all the economic output of the region is gone. Reports indicate
that coconut production, a major Philippine export, will take years to recover
and there is heightened risk that recent boom in manufacturing and mining may
wither if the government cannot handle reconstruction.
Each
year droughts in Africa, flooding in Pakistan and Australia, and tropical
cyclones in Southeast Asia and the Gulf of Mexico, earthquakes in Turkey, Haiti
and Japan undermine prosperity and challenge political stability around the
globe. According to Stratfor Global Intelligence, The Center for Research
on the Epidemiology of Disasters estimates that anywhere from 3-12% of the
world population each year are affected by natural disasters and the global costs
can range from $50 billion to $350 billion.
Disasters
obviously have a disproportionate impact on richer and poorer states. The
direct cost of Japan’s triple disaster in 2011 of earthquake, tsunami and
nuclear meltdown is estimated at $240 billion, but that is only 4% of Japan’s
$6 trillion economy. Whereas the cost of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti was
only $10 billion, but that amounted to over 120% of the island’s total GDP.
Due to
higher quality infrastructure, forecasting and early warning systems, response
capabilities and insurance coverage, rebuilding businesses and reviving
agriculture activity usually happens quickly in Japan, Europe, United States
other developed countries. But the trauma in undeveloped from a natural
disaster can take decades to rebuild and often drives away any hope of
attracting foreign investment and jobs.
But even
in the rich countries natural disasters can threaten the socio-political
stability and have long term economic growth implications. Japan’s
nuclear energy sector has not recovered from the Fukushima crisis, and its
energy profile may be permanently changed due to domestic opposition to
restarting Japan’s 44 other nuclear reactors. Prior to the earthquake and tsunami of March 2011,
nuclear reactors generated 30% of Joan’s electrical power from nuclear reactors
and was planned to rise to over 50% in the next twenty years. As a nation
that imports almost all its oil or natural gas, nuclear energy was a
national strategic priority to maintain competitiveness for its industry.
This was despite concerns about the ability of Japan’s nuclear plants to
withstand seismic activity after the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant was
completely shut down for 21 months following an earthquake in 2007.
Since
the Tsunami, Japan has increased consumption taxes, run its national debt up to
150% of GDP, forced down the exchange rate of its currency and begun an
offensive military buildup. All of this threatens a big jump in
inflation, but the Japanese national government is under severe pressure to
demonstrate its responsiveness to the economic crisis caused by the loss of
cheap nuclear energy in the short run and its ability to mitigate future
natural disasters in the long run.
The
Philippines has been promised assistance from the United States, the United
Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan and many others to address the immediate
humanitarian and economic disaster. But providing aid also allows pursuit
of political objectives. The U.S. assistance that is pouring into the
Philippines may help generate public good will at a time when the two allies
are negotiating expanding U.S. military port visitation rights to the former
U.S. naval base at Subic Bay. Japan’s contribution to the relief effort
is symbolic from a nation that invaded the Philippines during World War II, but
now wants as an ally to contain China’s effort to dominate the South China Sea.
Over
time, the direct damage from natural disasters will fade, but there often are
substantial long term social, economic and political ramifications. The
Philippine economy grew at an impressive 6.6% last year and was expected to continue
to grow at similar rates this year and next year. But before super
typhoon Haiyan’s came ashore, the nation 107 million people already suffered
from an unemployment rate of 20% and a poverty rate of 28%.
Given the scale of storm’s devastation, a collapse in Philippine economic
growth in the aftermath of super typhoon Haiyan may be a formula for political
chaos and popular rebellion.
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