Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Sede Manizales, IDEA,Cra. 27 No.64-60, Manizales, Colombia.
Disasters. 2010 Oct;34(4):1064-83. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7717.2010.01183.x.
The Disaster Deficit Index (DDI) measures macroeconomic and financial risk in a country according to possible catastrophic scenario events. Extreme disasters can generate financial deficit due to sudden and elevated need of resources to restore affected inventories. The DDI captures the relationship between the economic loss that a country could experience when a catastrophic event occurs and the availability of funds to address the situation. The proposed model utilises the procedures of the insurance industry in establishing probable losses, based on critical impacts during a given period of exposure; for economic resilience, the model allows one to calculate the country's financial ability to cope with a critical impact. There are limitations and costs associated with access to resources that one must consider as feasible values according to the country's macroeconomic and financial conditions. This paper presents the DDI model and the results of its application to 19 countries of the Americas and aims to guide governmental decision-making in disaster risk reduction.
灾难赤字指数(DDI)根据可能发生的灾难性情景事件,衡量一个国家的宏观经济和金融风险。极端灾害可能会因突然和大量需要资源来恢复受影响的库存而导致财政赤字。DDI 捕捉了一个国家在发生灾难性事件时可能经历的经济损失与应对该情况的可用资金之间的关系。所提出的模型利用保险业的程序,根据特定暴露期内的关键影响,确定可能的损失;为了经济弹性,该模型允许计算国家应对关键影响的财务能力。在获得资源方面存在限制和成本,必须根据国家的宏观经济和财务状况,将这些资源视为可行值。本文介绍了 DDI 模型及其在美洲 19 个国家的应用结果,旨在为政府的减少灾害风险决策提供指导。