40 research outputs found

    Disaster resilience: What it is and how it can engender a meaningful change in development policy

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    Disasters pose a growing threat to sustainable development. Disaster risk management efforts have largely failed to arrest the underlying drivers of growing risk globally: uncontrolled urbanization and proliferation of assets in hazardous areas. Resilience provides an opportunity to confront the social-ecological foundations of risk and development; yet it has been vaguely conceptualized, without offering a concrete approach to operationalization. We propose a conceptualization of disaster resilience centred on wellbeing: ‘The ability of a system, community or society to pursue its social, ecological and economic development objectives, while managing its disaster risk over time in a mutually reinforcing way.’ We present a conceptual framework for understanding the interconnections between disasters and development, and outline how it is being operationalized in practice

    Measuring International Trade Costs

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    The costs of international trade have become an increasingly important item in trade negotiations (under the heading 'trade facilitation') and element of trade theory, but definition and measurement of trade costs remain in their infancy. This paper argues that the most conceptually appropriate measure is the gap between cost-insurance-freight (cif) and free-on-board (fob) values of traded goods, but that this must be measured on a consistent volume of trade. Such data are only available for a few countries. We calculate cif-fob gap values for the three largest trading nations that report such data (Australia, Brazil and the USA). These values provide plausible estimates of ad valorem trade costs for the three importing countries and for all countries' exports. The estimates indicate that although trade costs have fallen over the last two decades, average trade costs now exceed the average tariff rate on imports into the USA and Australia. Country rankings by the cif-fob gap values differ significantly from those by commonly used proxies for trade costs, such as the indicators of time and cost in the World Bank's Doing Business database, and analysis based on such proxies is likely to produce misleading results. © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.Patricia Sourdin and Richard Pomfre
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