Disaster Resilience Strategy Building Resilience in Developing
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Disaster Resilience Strategy Building Resilience in Developing Countries Vulnerable to Large Natural Disasters, IMF Policy Paper, 2019 Saad Quayyum Strategy, Policy and Review Department International Monetary Fund
Key Challenges in Small States Under-investment in resilience -Limited domestic resources -Donor support focused more towards post-disaster recovery compared to building ex-ante resilience -Weak capacity Limited fiscal space to deal with large recovery costs, low insurance coverage, dependence on donors for post-disaster recovery Resilience plans not well-developed (or missing); capacity constraints
Disaster Resilience Strategy (DRS) Three Complementary Pillars for Ex-Ante Intervention PILLAR I Structural resilience - Resilient infrastructure - Appropriate building codes - Proper land use/zoning rules - Early waring systems PILLAR II Financial resilience - Macro-Fiscal/reserve buffers, incl. dedicated saving funds - Contingency loans - Insurance - State contingent debt instruments PILLAR III Post-Disaster resilience - Effective systems for emergency response, reconstruction and smooth recovery after a disaster
Pillar I: Structural Resilience Significant returns to investing in ex-ante structural resilience Resilient infrastructure 1030% more costly than nonresilient options But lower rebuilding/recovery costs & output loss over the long term
Pillar I: Structural Resilience DRS based on comprehensive forward-looking diagnostic. Risk assessment Project identification, costing and prioritization Investment scale-up needs to be accompanied by: Strong public financial management Medium term-fiscal and budgeting framework Robust public asset and investment management Sound regulations (building codes, zoning rules, land use) are important
Pillar II: Financial Resilience Strong macro-fiscal management and buffers Self-insurance: disaster funds and contingency budgets Risk-layered approach to disaster risk management: (different instruments for different disaster frequency and cost) Disaster Funds: Jamaica; Tuvalu Contingent loans: World Bank CAT-DDO (soft trigger): Dominican Rep., Seychelles, Sri Lanka IDB Contingent Credit Facilities (parametric triggers) AsDB Pacific Disaster Resilience Program: Tonga Traditional insurance: Regional insurance pools with parametric triggers (CCRIF, PCRIC, Africa Risk Capacity) Catastrophe (CAT) bonds: Similar to insurance, but risk transferred to capital markets Limited sovereign uptake; CCRIF issued cat bond to reinsure State-contingent debt instruments (SCDI): Hurricane clauses (Grenada, Barbados debt restructuring) Source: World Bank
Pillar III: Post-Disaster Resilience Detailed action plan to guide the post-disaster response of government agencies Clarify institutional arrangements & responsibilities Plans for quick resumptions of public services Social protection mechanism to extend support to the vulnerable Strong PFM/procurement system to aid recovery 7
Other Key Features of DRS Country Ownership Sound Financing Plan Domestic Revenue Mobilization Debt Donor support Consistency with multi-year macro-fiscal framework How will the plan impact growth, debt, current account ? Will debt remain sustainable?
Small States need significant support from other stakeholders World Bank (and other development banks): diagnostics, disaster risk reduction & financial resilience strategies, technical assistance for post-disaster resilience IMF: TA in macro-fiscal areas, making investment needs consistent within a sustainable macroeconomic framework in medium and long term Bilateral donors: support technical assistance, subsidize insurance, provide concessional financing Climate funds: unlock funding (simplify access) Official sector insurance companies: help design financial resilience strategy
Two DRS Pilots Completed Dominica Significant exposure to natural disasters Category 5 hurricanes in 2015 and 2017 Fiscal sustainability challenges Country elaborated climate resilience and recovery plan Unique role of CREAD Grenada Relatively lower exposure to hurricanes Slow moving disasters (sea level rise) a major concern IMF/WB Climate Change Policy Assessment Recent track record of fiscal responsibility Major World Bank and Green Climate Fund operations
Conclusion DRS based on a three-pillar strategy to improve structural, financial and postdisaster resilience Critical: DRS are home-grown Based on sound diagnostics, credible financing plan and sustainable multiyear macro-fiscal framework Implementation must be supported by multiple, coordinated stakeholders (TA & Financing) It should help to mobilize more resources towards building ex-ante resilience!