Description:
This paper has been prepared for policy
makers interested in establishing or strengthening financial
strategies to increase the financial response capacity of
governments of developing countries in the aftermath of
natural disasters, while protecting their long-term fiscal
balances. It analyzes various aspects of emergency
financing, including the types of instruments available,
their relative costs and disbursement speeds, and how these
can be combined to provide cost-effective financing for the
different phases that follow a disaster. The paper explains
why governments are usually better served by retaining most
of their natural disaster risk while using risk transfer
mechanisms to manage the excess volatility of their budgets
or access immediate liquidity after a disaster. Finally, it
discusses innovative approaches to disaster risk financing
and provides examples of strategies that developing
countries have implemented in recent years.