Publication | Closed Access
The Political Economy of FEMA Disaster Payments
421
Citations
17
References
2003
Year
Public PolicyEconomicsPublic FinanceDisaster ReliefDisaster ManagementFema Disaster ExpendituresPolitical EconomyDisaster ResponseBusinessFema Disaster PaymentsSocial SciencesDisaster MitigationPolitical BehaviorCrisis ManagementDisaster Risk ReductionPolitical SciencePolicy AnalysisDisaster Declaration
We find that presidential and congressional influences affect the rate of disaster declaration and the allocation of FEMA disaster expenditures across states. States politically important to the president have a higher rate of disaster declaration by the president, and disaster expenditures are higher in states having congressional representation on FEMA oversight committees. Election year impacts are also found. Our models predict that nearly half of all disaster relief is motivated politically rather than by need. The findings reject a purely altruistic model of FEMA assistance and question the relative effectiveness of government versus private disaster relief.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1