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Planet Money

The natural disaster economist

Planet Money

NPR

Business, News

4.6 β€’ 29.8K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 27 September 2023

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

There seems to be headlines about floods, wildfires, or hurricanes every week. Scientists say this might be the new normal β€” that climate change is making natural disasters more and more common.

Tatyana Deryugina is a leading expert on the economics of natural disasters β€” how we respond to them, how they affect the economy, and how they change our lives. And back when Tatyana first started researching natural disasters she realized that there's a lot we don't know about their long-term economic consequences. Especially about how individuals and communities recover.

Trying to understand those questions of how we respond to natural disasters is a big part of Tatyana's research. And her research has some surprising implications for how we should be responding to natural disasters.

This episode was hosted and reported by Jeff Guo. It was produced by Emma Peaslee and edited by Jess Jiang. It was fact checked by Sierra Juarez and engineered by Josephine Nyounai. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer.

Help support Planet Money and get bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in
Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This message comes from NPR, sponsor Honeywell, helping meet your sustainability goals with

0:05.2

their consultative approach and technologies that already support you wherever you are

0:09.5

in the journey.

0:10.5

Learn more at Honeywell.com slash NPR.

0:15.2

This is Planet Money from NPR.

0:20.1

The other day, I got a chance to talk to someone who really changed how I think about economics

0:25.1

and economic research.

0:27.0

I kind of want to just ask you, do you remember me?

0:31.6

No.

0:32.6

You mean, have we met before?

0:35.9

Tatiana Durgana is an economist and a professor at the University of Illinois.

0:40.5

Yeah.

0:41.5

Okay.

0:42.5

I'm sorry.

0:43.5

I do not.

0:44.5

You have no recollection whatsoever.

0:45.5

No.

0:46.5

No.

0:47.5

I'm so sorry.

0:48.5

Before she was a professor, Tatiana was a teaching assistant.

0:51.3

In fact, she was the teaching assistant for a class that I took in college.

0:55.5

Oh, wow.

...

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