The economies of developing countries tend to depend on agriculture, which is vulnerable to climate change, a study found. Malay Mail Online |
This is slightly lower than the global average shrinkage of 3 per cent.
The study assessed 82 countries to determine their Climate Change Resilience Index, or how their economies will be affected based on their capacity to withstand climate change.
A summary of the findings were released on Wednesday (Nov 20) by research and analysis company The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), which is the research arm of newspaper The Economist.
Mr John Ferguson, the EIU’s country analysis director, told TODAY that climate change will have a limited impact on Singapore’s economy even though developing countries within Asia Pacific will be affected.
“High levels of income per head, a lack of dependence on agricultural commodity exports for growth, and the Government's strong ability and willingness to intervene to mitigate the impact of climate change will alleviate related risks for Singapore to a significant extent.”
However, he said that as a small island nation, Singapore will be vulnerable to increasing floods and weather-related disasters such as changes to climate patterns and rising sea levels.
“Some supply-chain risks also exist, particularly if Singapore's imported food supplies are affected by increasing climatic volatility,” he added.
How countries were assessed
The ability and willingness of countries to confront climate change were examined in line with eight indicators:
- The loss of land or physical capital due to extreme weather
- The impact on public services, basic needs and government spending
- The impact on agriculture
- Loss of labour productivity
- Tourism losses
- Trade losses
- Cost of adaptation to climate change
- Cost to mitigate climate change
Among the seven regions assessed, researchers expect North America to suffer the least amount of real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) loss (of 1.1 per cent) by 2050.
Conversely, it found that the region which is least resilient to climate change is Africa (loss of 4.7 per cent).
The level of real GDP loss forecasted for all regions:
- North America – 1.1 per cent
- Western Europe – 1.7 per cent
- Asia Pacific – 2.6 per cent
- Eastern Europe – 3 per cent
- Middle East – 3.7 per cent
- Latin America – 3.8 per cent
- Africa – 4.7 per cent
Africa took the bottom spot because it faces higher average temperatures and lower levels of economic development. Policymakers there will also face challenges meeting their objectives for policies related to climate change.
Why poorer countries would be hit hardest
Countries which are poorer and have higher average temperatures will be the most affected.
Nearly all low-income countries are tropical, increasing their exposure to global warming, the report said.Poor quality of infrastructure and housing also make these countries less resilient to extreme weather.
Another reason: The economies of developing countries tend to depend on agriculture, which is vulnerable to climate change. A rise in temperature could lead to more competition over dwindling fertile land and deteriorating food security, increasing the possibility of social unrest.
Within Asia Pacific, developing countries such as Bangladesh will be affected by climate change the most.
What else is needed for climate resilience
While a rich country is better prepared to confront its challenges and so has an advantage in withstanding climate change, the institutional quality of a country matters as well, the report stated. This refers to attributes such as the level of corruption, the quality of the bureaucracy and the protection of property rights in a country.
Institutional quality is thus tied to a country’s initiatives to adapt to climate change, such as building flood defences. Institutional quality can also affect policies which aim to reduce carbon emissions, such as carbon taxes.
The United States is an example of a North American economy that is well-prepared to confront economic and social challenges related to climate change, the study found.
It has a well-funded research and development sector as well as strong national institutions.
It is also less exposed to geographic risks related to climate change as compared to developing countries.
The report noted that US President Donald Trump may have negative polices on climate change such as withdrawing from the Paris Climate Change Agreement, showing that strong institutions do not always facilitate climate-friendly policies, but policies can still be formed and implemented quickly when there is political will.
Links
- Global GDP Will Suffer At Least A 3% Hit By 2050 From Unchecked Climate Change, Say Economists
- Climate change an urgent problem with ‘very major consequences’, says PM Lee
- Why climate change should matter to Singaporeans and what the Govt is doing about it
- More S’poreans aware of climate change but not doing enough to slow crisis, say activists
- How the food that Singaporeans eat contributes to climate change
- Why we need to use nature in the fight against climate change
- Economist Intelligence Unit: Resilience to climate change?
- How climate change is ‘creating a dilemma’ for the world’s central bankers
- Banks increasingly unload flooded-out mortgages at taxpayer expense
- Economist Intelligence Unit: Australia
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