Litcius/Paper detail

Human Capital Investment after the Storm

Emily Gallagher, Stephen B. Billings, Lowell R. Ricketts

2023Review of Financial Studies31 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract How does household exposure to a natural disaster affect higher education investments? Using variation in flooding from Hurricane Harvey (2017), we find that college-aged adults from flooded blocks in Houston are 7% less likely than counterparts to have student loans after Harvey, with larger effects in areas with more potential first-generation students. We find a similar relative decline in enrollment at more exposed Texas universities and colleges and a shift toward majors with higher expected earnings. Our results highlight a decrease in the quantity but an increase in the intensity of investments in human capital after the storm. Authors have furnished an Internet Appendix, which is available on the Oxford University Press Web site next to the link to the final published paper online.

Topics & Concepts

StormEarningsInvestment (military)Flooding (psychology)Human capitalNatural disasterThe InternetCapital (architecture)Demographic economicsFinanceBusinessEconomicsPolitical scienceGeographyPsychologyEconomic growthMeteorologyComputer sciencePoliticsWorld Wide WebLawPsychotherapistArchaeologyAgricultural risk and resilienceDisaster Management and ResilienceFlood Risk Assessment and Management