Working Paper
Financial Constraints and Employment Dynamics following Natural Disasters
Abstract: We use confidential loan-level regulatory data to show that financial constraints can weigh on credit access and employment after a natural disaster at both the local and national level. Banks cut back on lending in disaster areas, particularly to the most financially constrained firms, and these reductions in credit supply lead to larger initial declines and slower subsequent recoveries in employment. Bank profitability is a key driver of this result: Borrowers more reliant on less-profitable lenders obtain fewer loans and pay higher interest rates following disasters. These less-profitable lenders also respond by providing fewer loans and charging higher interest rates to financially constrained borrowers in other unaffected areas. We show that these financial spillovers ultimately distort employment growth. Our findings suggest a potential role for policies that improve access to credit in the aftermath of natural disasters.
JEL Classification: G11; G12; G21;
https://doi.org/10.18651/RWP2025-16
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Bibliographic Information
Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Part of Series: Research Working Paper
Publication Date: 2025-11-21
Number: RWP 25-16