Long-term impact of natural disasters on vietnamese income per capita: The case of typhoon durian

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Abstract

This study estimates the effect of natural disasters on Vietnamese income per capita in both short and long-term. The analysis also evaluates the effects by sources of income including income from salary; income from agriculture, fishery, forest; and income from industry, construction, trade, and services. Typhoon Durian happened in December 2006 in southern provinces of Vietnam is chosen for the comparative case study. The analysis applies the Synthetic control method (SCM) to construct a counterfactual with respect to two different control groups and conducts a permutation test for the estimated values. The results show that typhoon Durian decreased aggregate income per capita of the affected region and the effect was long lasting. The reduction of monthly income per capita was estimated to be 56,925 VND which accounts for 7.9% of the total income. The most affected source of income is from agriculture, forestry, and fishery.

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Nguyen, K. H., & Pham, T. T. T. (2020). Long-term impact of natural disasters on vietnamese income per capita: The case of typhoon durian. Entrepreneurship and Sustainability Issues, 8(1), 590–603. https://doi.org/10.9770/jesi.2020.8.1(41)

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