Foreign Aid and (Big) Shocks: Evidence from Natural Disasters

Foreign Aid and (Big) Shocks
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2025 Issue 006
Publication date: January 2025
ISBN: 9798400299117
$20.00
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Topics covered in this book

This title contains information about the following subjects. Click on a subject if you would like to see other titles with the same subjects.

Exports and Imports , Natural Disasters , Bilateral aid , Natural disasters , Disaster aid , Global , Aid Allocation , Natural Disasters , Political Alignment , Absorptive Capacity

Summary

We explore the effect of (big) shocks on the allocation of (bilateral) aid using natural disasters as natural experiments. We find that aid commitment statistically significantly increases following natural disasters, and that humanitarian aid precedes structural aid. While we find that the average effect is quantitatively significant, poorest countries or countries faced with most damaging natural disasters do not receive the most aid. We find no evidence that foreign aid commitment disburses faster following natural disasters. Further explorations into the mechanisms driving aid in disaster countries point to the importance of political alignment with (major) donors in recipient countries with low state capacity.