RESUMEN
There has been a steady increase in the occurrence of natural disasters. Yet their effect on economic growthremains unclear, with some studies reporting negative,and others indicating no, or even positive effects. These seemingly contradictory findings can be reconciled by exploring the effects of natural disasters on growth separately by disaster and economic sector. This is consistent with the insights from traditional models of economic growth, where production depends on total factor productivity, the provision of intermediate outputs, and the capital-labor ratio, as well as the existence of important intersector linkages. Applying a dynamic Generalized Method of Moments panel estimator to a 1961û2005 cross-country panel, three major insights emerge. First, disasters affect economic growth - but not always negatively, and differently across disasters and economic sectors. Second, although moderate disasters can have a positive growth effect in some sectors, severe disasters do not.Third, growth in developing countries is more sensitive to natural disastersùmore sectors are affected and the magnitudes are non-trivial.