Droughts and Deficits
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World Bank, Washington, DC
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As climate change intensifies, dry
rainfall shocks and droughts are a growing concern. At the
same time, scientific evidence suggests that the world has
surpassed the safe planetary boundary for green water, which
is water stored in biomass and soil that is crucial for
maintaining climate resilience. Yet, evidence at the global
scale of these combined forces on economic growth is poorly
understood. This paper attempts to fill this gap by using
data on annual subnational gross domestic product for 82
countries from 1990–2014. Using rainfall shocks as plausibly
exogenous variations in a spatially specific panel at the
grid level, the analysis finds that the global effects of
droughts on economic activity are substantial. Moderate to
extreme droughts reduce gross domestic product per capita
growth between 0.39 and 0.85 percentage point, on average,
depending on the level of development and baseline climatic
conditions, with low- and middle-income countries in arid
areas sustaining the highest relative losses. In high-income
countries, moderate droughts have no impact, and only
extreme droughts have adverse effects, reducing growth by
about 0.3 percentage point, a little less than half the
impact felt in the low- and middle-income country sample for
the same intensity of drought. Crucially, the impact of a
dry shock of a given magnitude also depends on antecedent
green water availability. The results show that increases in
soil moisture in previous years can neutralize the harmful
impacts from a dry shock, with suggestive evidence that
local and upstream forest cover are key channels through
which these impacts manifest. These findings have important
implications for measuring the economic impact of droughts
and can inform adaptation investments.
Palabras clave
RAINFALL, DROUGHT, GDP GROWTH AND DROUGHT, SOIL MOISTURE, LAND USE, RAINFALL SHOCKS, CLIMATE RESILIENCE, GREEN WATER
