Temperature Variability and the Macroeconomy: A World Tour

被引:24
作者
Donadelli, Michael [1 ]
Jueppner, Marcus [2 ,3 ]
Vergalli, Sergio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Brescia, Brescia, Italy
[2] Goethe Univ Frankfurt, Deutsch Bundesbank, Frankfurt, Germany
[3] Goethe Univ Frankfurt, Fac Econ & Business Adm, Frankfurt, Germany
关键词
Temperature variability; Productivity growth; Macro-regions; Welfare; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SHOCKS; GROWTH; MODELS; RISK;
D O I
10.1007/s10640-021-00579-5
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This paper uses historical monthly temperature level data for a panel of 114 countries to identify the effects of within year temperature level variability on productivity growth in five different macro regions, i.e., (1) Africa, (2) Asia, (3) Europe, (4) North America and (5) South America. We find two primary results. First, higher intra-annual temperature variability reduces (increases) productivity in Europe and North America (Asia). Second, higher intra-annual temperature variability has no significant effects on productivity in Africa and South America. Additional empirical tests indicate also the following: (1) rising intra-annual temperature variability reduces productivity (even thought less significantly)in both tropical and non-tropical regions, (2) inter-annual temperature variability reduces (increases) productivity in North America (Europe) and (3) winter and summer inter-annual temperature variability generates a drop in productivity in both Europe and North America. Taken together, these findings indicate that temperature variability shocks tend to have stronger adverse economic effects among richer economies. In a production economy featuring long-run productivity and temperature volatility shocks, we quantify these negative impacts and find welfare losses of 2.9% (1%) in Europe (North America).
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 259
页数:39
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]   Estimation of panel vector autoregression in Stata [J].
Abrigo, Michael R. M. ;
Love, Inessa .
STATA JOURNAL, 2016, 16 (03) :778-804
[2]   Temperature shocks and the cost of equity capital: Implications for climate change perceptions [J].
Balvers, Ronald ;
Du, Ding ;
Zhao, Xiaobing .
JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2017, 77 :18-34
[3]  
Bansal Ravi., 2011, Welfare Costs of Long Run Temperature Shifts
[4]  
Brenner T, 2014, WORKING PAPERS INNOV
[5]   Temperature and Growth: A Panel Analysis of the United States [J].
Colacito, Riccardo ;
Hoffmann, Bridget ;
Phan, Toan .
JOURNAL OF MONEY CREDIT AND BANKING, 2019, 51 (2-3) :313-368
[6]   Long-run productivity risk: A new hope for production-based asset pricing? [J].
Croce, Mariano Massimiliano .
JOURNAL OF MONETARY ECONOMICS, 2014, 66 :13-31
[7]   Functional diversity of catch mitigates negative effects of temperature variability on fisheries yields [J].
Dee, Laura E. ;
Miller, Steve J. ;
Peavey, Lindsey E. ;
Bradley, Darcy ;
Gentry, Rebecca R. ;
Startz, Richard ;
Gaines, Steven D. ;
Lester, Sarah E. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2016, 283 (1836)
[8]   Temperature Shocks and Economic Growth: Evidence from the Last Half Century [J].
Dell, Melissa ;
Jones, Benjamin F. ;
Olken, Benjamin A. .
AMERICAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL-MACROECONOMICS, 2012, 4 (03) :66-95
[9]   Temperature shocks and welfare costs [J].
Donadelli, M. ;
Jueppner, M. ;
Riedel, M. ;
Schlag, C. .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC DYNAMICS & CONTROL, 2017, 82 :331-355
[10]   SUBSTITUTION, RISK-AVERSION, AND THE TEMPORAL BEHAVIOR OF CONSUMPTION AND ASSET RETURNS - A THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK [J].
EPSTEIN, LG ;
ZIN, SE .
ECONOMETRICA, 1989, 57 (04) :937-969