Weather Shocks, Population, and Housing Prices: the Role of Expectation Revisions
I provide new evidence about the information content of weather shocks in the US coastal states, based on substantial hurricane impacts, with a quasi-experimental research design that matches counties by risk, size, and income. I examine if hurricanes represent “new news” in counties with no prior h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Economics of disasters and climate change 2022-11, Vol.6 (3), p.495-540 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | I provide new evidence about the information content of weather shocks in the US coastal states, based on substantial hurricane impacts, with a quasi-experimental research design that matches counties by risk, size, and income. I examine if hurricanes represent “new news” in counties with no prior hurricanes and if expectations updating is reflected in population and house price growth. I develop a measure reflecting homeowners’ flood risk expectation based on flood insurance deductible data, which assumes that higher deductibles reveal lower flood expectations. I find that population growth declines more in counties without previous hurricanes and that this is driven by areas with lower flood-risk priors, consistent with updating when the hurricane is more likely to be “new news”. This is supported by within-county evidence that directly controls for hurricane losses and residents’ priors. I find that information updating actually increases house price growth in impacted counties with no previous hurricanes. |
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ISSN: | 2511-1280 2511-1299 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s41885-022-00116-8 |