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How Local are the Local Economic Impacts of Wildfires?

Margaret A. Walls and Matthew Wibbenmeyer
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Margaret A. Walls: Resources for the Future
Matthew Wibbenmeyer: Resources for the Future

Authors registered in the RePEc Author Service: Leonard Shabman

No 23-03, RFF Working Paper Series from Resources for the Future

Abstract: As large and damaging wildfires have increased in frequency in the western United States, the consequences of these events for local economies remain largely unknown. Studies of the effects of natural disasters on local economic growth have yielded mixed results, and few have examined wildfires—especially large and damaging wildfires. We investigate the local economic impacts of wildfires in the western United States using two empirical approaches, which rely on public county-level economic data and administrative-establishment-level data, respectively. Comparing findings with these two data sources allows us to investigate how local the local economic effects of wildfires are. We find no significant short- or long-run effects of major wildfires on county-level employment growth. However, when we analyze results closer to the actual fire locations, we find that job growth in the year of the fire declines by 1.3 percentage points, but rebounds after that with no significant long-run effect. When analyzed by industry, both approaches show a boost in employment growth in the construction sector, but the results for other sectors have some important differences.

Date: 2023-03-08
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-des, nep-env, nep-lab and nep-ure
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)

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