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Economic activity is risky. Returns across economic sectors can be highly variable, potentially causing costly adjustments to consumption. However, when returns are imperfectly correlated across sectors and insurance is unavailable, diversification can reduce the economic impact of shocks. Therefore, despite the well-known efficiency benefits from specialization, the risks of too little diversification have long been acknowledged. But how big are the benefits of diversification? This paper exploits the exogeneity and randomness of earthquakes to address this question. There is robust evidence that more specialized economies experience larger declines in consumption when earthquakes occur, and consistent with the insurance channel, the cost of specialization is smaller in more financially developed economies.
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Edition | Availability |
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1
How Big Are the Benefits of Economic Diversification?: Evidence from Earthquakes
2005, International Monetary Fund
in English
1451860676 9781451860672
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2
How Big Are the Benefits of Economic Diversification?: Evidence from Earthquakes
2005, International Monetary Fund
in English
1452710821 9781452710822
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3
How big are the benefits of economic diversification?: evidence from earthquakes
2005, International Monetary Fund, Research Dept.
in English
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4
How Big Are the Benefits of Economic Diversification?: Evidence from Earthquakes
2005, International Monetary Fund
in English
145190603X 9781451906035
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Book Details
Edition Notes
"March 2005."
Includes bibliographical references (p. 16-17).
Also available on the World Wide Web.
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- Created October 24, 2008
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