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published in: IWH Discussion Papers

Cultural Resilience and Economic Recovery: Evidence from Hurricane Katrina

This paper investigates the critical role of culture for economic recovery after natural disasters. Using Hurricane Katrina as our laboratory, we find a significant adverse treatment effect for plant-level productivity. However, local religious adherence and larger shares of ancestors with disaster experiences mutually mitigate this detrimental effect from the disaster. Religious adherence further dampens anxiety after Hurricane Katrina, which potentially spur economic recovery. We also detect this effect on the aggregate county level. More religious counties recover faster in terms of population, new establishments, and GDP.

22. September 2020

Authors Iftekhar Hasan Stefano Manfredonia Felix Noth

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