Extreme heat is associated with reductions in human activity
Extreme heat is a growing threat to both individual livelihoods and broader economies, killing an increasing number of people each year as temperatures increase and limiting productivity - often in the countries that would benefit most from economic growth. Many studies document the link between hea...
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Zusammenfassung: | Extreme heat is a growing threat to both individual livelihoods and broader
economies, killing an increasing number of people each year as temperatures
increase and limiting productivity - often in the countries that would benefit
most from economic growth. Many studies document the link between heat waves
and mortality or morbidity, and others explore the economic consequences of
them, but few are able to identify the ways in which populations respond to the
shock of extreme heat. Toward this end, we investigate the link between human
mobility and fluctuations in temperature. Using additive models fitting data in
Indonesia, India and Mexico, we show that extreme heat reduces mobility by up
to 10% in rural areas and 5% in urban settings. Effects are stronger in poorer
areas. Twinning these models with climate projections, we show that without
adaptation mobility will fall 1-2% per year on aggregate, with certain seasons
and places seeing activity fall by as much as 10%. According to our estimates,
rural areas will face the highest relative losses and urban megacities will
experience the greatest absolute impacts. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.20437 |