Natural disasters here and abroad have taken their toll this year on families, homes and communities. They also have ravaged local economies everywhere they've hit, imperiling budgets and businesses from Japan to the Mississippi River Delta to the U.S. Midwest. For example, Joplin, Mo.'s cataclysmic tornado (left), which resulted in an estimated 116 deaths, destroyed hundreds of homes and vehicles, as well as a high school, a hospital and an entire commercial neighborhood.
(Photo: The Associated Press)
The economics of disaster encompass cleanup costs, emergency crew services, disrupted travel and commerce, increased insurance coverage, crop and livestock damage and even—in the case of the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant due to the earthquake and tsunami in Japan (left)—containment of radiation leakage. In addition, disruptions to Japan's supply chains have led to negative consequences for global manufacturers.
(Photo: The Associated Press)
When disaster strikes, market watchers scramble to keep up with changes in commodities prices and earnings losses in industrial sectors ranging from Consumer Staples to Technology to Financials. Meanwhile, property-casualty insurers are kept busy sending claims adjusters to stricken sites. Insurers such as The Travelers Cos. and The Hartford Financial Services Group have visited Minnesota, Alabama (left) and many states in between this year, which is already the second deadliest tornado season on record, with 425 fatalities as of Monday, according to the Insurance Information Institute. President Barack Obama has requested $6.79 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) this year, and a House committee voted Tuesday to send an added $1 billion to help emergency crews clean up all the tornado and flood damage.
(Photo: The Associated Press)
Also in the United States, the Mississippi River showed its terrible might with floods all along its banks this spring, from Illinois to Mississippi (left) to Louisiana. Waterway commerce has been disrupted, and delayed barge traffic has forced overland trucking of some cargo. So far, according to the Army Corps of Engineers, an estimated 2.2 million acres of farmland have been flooded in the Mississippi Delta, about 1% of all U.S. cropland.
(Photo: The Associated Press)