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Episode details

World Service,16 Sep 2017,26 mins

Can You Disaster-Proof an Economy?

In the Balance

Available for over a year

What lessons should we learn from the damage hurricane Irma has inflicted on Florida and the Caribbean, the flooding hurricane Harvey wreaked on Texas and the floods that have devastated parts of South Asia? And how can politicians and aid agencies be persuaded to spend more money preparing for natural disasters, rather than clearing up after the event? Manuela Saragosa talks to one environmental planning expert in Houston, Texas, who says some parts of the city will become uninhabitable. And she hears from experts around the world on the best way to contain the economic damage of future natural disasters. Contributors: Jim Blackburn, Rice University, Houston MB Akhter, Bangladesh Country Director for Oxfam Tom Bamforth from Shelter Cluster Ilan Noy, Professor at Victoria University in Wellington, holder of the inaugural Chair in the Economics of Disasters Christina Bennett from the Overseas Development Institute (Picture: People shop in a supermarket after Hurricane Irma swept through the area on September 13, 2017 in Naples, Florida. Credit: Getty Images)

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