Natural disasters and intergovernmental relations: more or less decentralisation?
研究发现自然灾害发生后,地方政府的支出和收入份额会上升,即权力下放增强,且这种效应在经济扩张期更明显。
Subnational governments, at the regional and local levels, play an important role in the prevention, management and recovery from natural disasters. These jurisdictions are responsible for issuing and monitoring compliance with several aspects of regulation that are essential for risk prevention, providing frontline services that are crucial for effective crisis management, and rebuilding lost or damaged physical infrastructure in the recovery phase. This paper provides empirical evidence based on impulse response functions that the occurrence of natural disasters is associated with an increase in the subnational shares of government spending and revenue in the years following these shocks. These decentralisation effects vary according to specific shocks and are conditional on the business cycle: they tend to be stronger when the shocks materialise during economic expansions.