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Katrina

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Katrina and Some Economics of Hurricanes

September 8, 2005





Hurricane Fran hit this area quite hard in 1996. I’m sure that many of you were in this

area at the time and remember it well. At the time, I prepared some materials for one of

my classes that discussed how the dislocation of a hurricane displayed the working of

markets.



In the ordinary course of things, the working of markets goes on almost unnoticed.

Entrepreneurial action--planning, pricing, searching, and risk taking--recedes into the

background. Economic equilibria are not unlike atmospheric equilbria; nice places to live

but not so much to talk about. Economic equilibrium is the same damn thing, over and

over. A dislocation, a hurricane for example, provides a special show.



The most interesting economic aspect of Fran was the evidence of the rapid coordination

that occurred, desirable actions induced by market incentives--profit motives. Sadly,

Katrina was so devastating that even market responses have been slow. Communications

networks, transport facilities, retail stores, and utilities were, for at least a week after the

hurricane came through, either severely damaged or under water. Also, most of the

market participants—buyers and sellers—are still outside the affected areas. Even with

all that, some businesses are beginning to re-establish commerce. You probably read that

most of the Walmart stores in the area have reopened, although eighteen were destroyed

and will not reopen anytime soon.



Fran, which seemed so severe to us at the time, was modest by comparison and the

market responses to the storm were of a very different character. Fran hit on a Thursday

night. By the Friday afternoon, many stores had opened, sold out of their emergency

goods, and restocked those same goods. By Sunday, under clear skies, many retailers,

still without power, were operating in their parking lots on generators, offering abundant

quantities of saws, garbage bags, gloves, propane cylinders, leaf blowers, tarps--you

name it. How did all this stuff get here? Who was in charge?



For retail stores to be restocked so quickly, some of these goods must have been on

trucks, rolling toward Raleigh before the hurricane had finished with us. None of the

things I'm talking about was the result of any centralized plan. All of it was independent

action by individuals and companies, all in search of profit opportunities. Of course, state

and federal agencies did play a very important role in the recovery, but they were not

much in evidence on Friday morning, or even through the weekend. And they had little to

do with providing the ordinary commodities of comfortable life.



Other interesting phenomena concerned pricing behavior. For the most part, large

companies offered goods at their usual prices. Goods that had been advertised at

discounted prices just prior to the hurricane continued to be sold at those discounts. But

for other kinds of goods and services such as tree cutting, construction, and other private

emergency services, prices rose substantially. Profit opportunities brought in tree cutters

from all over the eastern U.S. It was not unusual to see private work crews from Florida,

West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, or Ohio. The high prevailing prices for services

attracted these service providers in to the area. The high prices also caused customers to

sort, entirely for their own self-interests, which tree work needed to be done now and

which could wait a while until the crisis passed. We didn’t need FEMA officials to sort

out the high priorities from the low; consumers had every reason to do this for

themselves. Getting the trees off the roof would get done right now, cleaning up the back

yard could wait until the emergency had passed and prices had fallen.



Economic disturbances often bring political attacks on markets. The prices that we

become used to--those equilibrium prices that we talk about--take on moral overtones.

We tend to think of them as correct, or fair, or just prices. Politicians can make hay by

denouncing any price elevation. We hear condemnation of greed. This happened with

Fran; we’re hearing it again with Katrinal.



In Fran, I was thankful for the greed of my neighborhood hardware store owner. He was

so evil as to open up at dusk, running his cash registers and lights on portable generators.

While I was still in a daze from what had happened overnight, he was open for business,

offering many of thing things I needed to begin putting our lives back together.



Unfortunately for me, my friendly hardware man had held to his advertised sale prices for

batteries. That meant the customers who arrived before me on Friday morning had no

incentive to curtail their purchases to what they needed for the emergency. Why not stock

up at the sale prices? I’d have done the same thing had I been there first. Had the shop

owner been a bit greedier and pulled the sale tags, I might have been able to buy some D

cells. No matter though, he had restocked by noon.



Another companion to a disaster is confusion regarding its economic effect. Over the next

few weeks, you may hear some commentator suggest that Katrina will be good for the

Gulf Coast economy, stimulating demand through the need for repairs. Your instinct is

probably that this is nuts. Your instincts are good. Your instincts are also probably

sharpened by our experience in North Carolina with Floyd, which dealt a terrible blow to

this state’s economic well being. The commentator’s error is nicely exposited in a famous

essay by the nineteenth century essayist Fredric Bastiat. In that essay, a shopkeeper’s son

has carelessly broken the shop’s window. A crowd gathers and before long people get to

saying that this is good news for the glazier, who will spend his windfall and provide a

payday for someone else, who will in turn spend his windfall and so on. The fallacy is

that the shopkeeper had other plans for the money that he’ll have to spend on the new

window. The full essay can be seen at http://www.jim.com/seen.htm#BrokB



The following are some comments and questions that I wrote up for a class that I taught a

few days after Fran came through. Have a look. If we have time and people are

interested, we’ll talk about some of this in class. See you Monday night.

Some Economics of Hurricane Fran

September 9, 1996



We've had a lot of weather over the past few days. We've also had a lot of

economics. Just as we can learn a lot of meteorology from a hurricane, we can also learn

a good bit of economics. Here are some things to think about.



1. Before the power was on in many neighborhoods, and before almost anything else was

open, the hardware stores were open. Who decided that this was a high priority? (Was it

FEMA or any other agency?) Who organized this result?



2. These hardware stores ordinarily might sell a couple of chainsaws per week. With

the hurricane, they sold out their stock in a matter of minutes when they opened Friday

morning. Additional stock came in to the city to restock these stores. (Where were they

before, where else would they have gone?) By the middle of the day on Sunday, there

were unsold stocks on dealer shelves. How did this happen? Who organized this

mobilization of resources?



3. Store owners might have easily anticipated that they would sell out of batteries,

propane, chainsaws, flashlights, two-cycle oil, and so on when they opened on Friday.

The few gas stations that had electric power to pump gasoline on Saturday would soon

sell out of gas. But most retailers did not raise prices. They could have sold out just the

same at higher-than-normal prices but they did not. Why didn't they raise prices?



4. If store owners had raised their prices on a critical item--propane tanks for example--

would that action have been socially harmful or helpful? By what criterion? Who would

be better off? Who would be worse off?



6. On Saturday, an acquaintance of mine was helping a number of people in his

neighborhood taking down trees and clearing debris. Although he normally makes his

living as a motorcycle mechanic, he is quite skillful at tree work and was taking a lead

role in the cleanup operation. The owner of a tree service firm that was working in the

neighborhood observed his work and offered him $50.00/hour to work on Sunday and

any other time that he could spare. Normally, tree workers make less than that, but lots

of people needed tree work very badly, and the owner of the tree service must have

though that it would take a pretty good wage to bid this motorcycle mechanic away from

his usual activities. The mechanic will work for the tree service until his motorcycle shop

gets power. Is his decision to work for the tree company something that reduces the

wealth of anyone in the society? Does his decision raise an ethical question? Should

the tree company be prevented from paying him this high wage? Do you suppose the

company is paying its regular workers a higher-than-normal wage? Should that be

permitted? Should the company be allowed to charge a higher that normal price for its

services?

7. One television news station reported on the problem of price gouging. They

interviewed a homeowner who was quoted a price of $2200 to remove a large tree that

was damaged and leaning slightly. That price seems to be way out of line with even the

current crisis prices. (The homeowner did not accept the bid.) Should such prices be

outlawed? Relate your answer to this question to your answers to the questions above.

Who could determine whether a price should be outlawed?



8. A young couple brought a truckload of chainsaws down from the mountains and sold

them in a hardware store parking lot with the permission of the hardware store (Which

was out of saws but was doing a fine business in gloves, safety goggles, bar oil and rope).

The price reportedly wasn't a bad price, but it apparently included enough of a premium

to make the enterprise worthwhile for this couple. Who might have been helped by this

activity? Who was hurt? What is your evaluation of this activity? What if the enterprise

was organized not by a young couple saving up for a down payment on a house, but a

large manufacturer of chainsaws?



9. Johnson County, the county just south of Wake, has just instituted price controls.

Prices of essential items cannot be sold for more than their pre-Fran prices. If you lived

in Johnson County, would you be pleased with this?



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