3 edition of An empirical analysis on the economic impact of federal terrorism reinsurance found in the catalog.
An empirical analysis on the economic impact of federal terrorism reinsurance
Published
2004
by National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Mass
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | Jeffrey R. Brown ... [et al.]. |
Series | NBER working paper series -- no. 10388., Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research) -- working paper no. 10388. |
Contributions | Brown, Jeffrey R. 1968-, National Bureau of Economic Research. |
The Physical Object | |
---|---|
Pagination | 39, [5] p. : |
Number of Pages | 39 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL17620791M |
OCLC/WorldCa | 55072477 |
Corpus ID: The Economic Effects of Terrorism: Counterfactual Analysis of the Case of Israel @inproceedings{PersitzTheEE, title={The Economic Effects of Terrorism: Counterfactual Analysis of the Case of Israel}, author={Dotan Persitz}, year={} }. An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance.” (). Assessing Catastrophe CumminsAuthor: J. David Cummins.
An empirical analysis of the economic impact of federal terrorism reinsurance Journal of Monetary Economics, , 51, (5), View citations (27) See also Working Paper () The Demand for Insurance With an Upper Limit on Coverage Journal of Risk & . vate decisionmakers on economic security in the face of the threat of terrorism. Terrorism risk insurance studies provide the backbone of data and analysis to inform appropriate choices with respect to the renewal of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of (TRIA) in Cited by:
measure to provide catastrophic federal reinsurance for terrorism risk without charging premiums up front. Although no major terrorist attacks have occurred in the United States since 9/11 and thus the government has paid no claims, the threat of terrorist attacks persists. Lawmakers reauthorized TRIA in. Measuring the Economic Costs of Terrorism Walter Enders and Eric Olson Department of Economics Finance and Legal Studies Culverhouse College of Commerce & Business Administration University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, AL Abstract The paper surveys the various economic costs associated with terrorism. Particularly important is.
An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance Jeffrey R. Brown, J. David Cummins, Christopher M.
Lewis, Ran Wei. NBER Working Paper No. Issued in March NBER Program(s):Public Economics Program. This paper examines the role of the federal government in the market for terrorism by: The objective of this paper is to provide empirical evidence on whether TRIA has had the intended economic effects by studying the stock price reaction of firms in the industries most affected by the Act—banking, construction, insurance, real estate investment trusts (REITs), transportation, and public utilities.
2 We examine the stock price response of affected industries to a sequence of thirteen key legislative events beginning with the initial proposals for a federal Cited by: Abstract This paper examines the role of the federal government in the market for terrorism reinsurance.
We investigate the stock price response of affected industries to a sequence of 13 events culminating in the enactment of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) of Cited by: This paper examines the role of the federal government in the market for terrorism reinsurance.
We investigate the stock price response of affected industries to a sequence of thirteen events culminating in the enactment of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) of Cited by: An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance Article (PDF Available) in Journal of Monetary Economics 51(5) February with 55 Reads.
An empirical analysis on the economic impact of federal terrorism reinsurance. [Jeffrey R Brown; National Bureau of Economic Research.;] # An empirical analysis on the economic impact of federal terrorism reinsurance\/span>\n \u00A0\u00A0\u00A0\n schema:name\/a> \" Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research).
An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance. An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance By Jeffrey R. Brown, J. David Cummins, Christopher M.
Lewis and Ran Wei Get PDF ( KB). An empirical analysis of the economic impact of federal terrorism reinsurance. By Jeffrey R. Brown, J. David Cummins, Christopher M. Lewis and Ran Wei. OAI identifier: Provided by: Research Papers in Economics.
Concerned that the unavailability of terrorism insurance would impede economic recovery and hinder growth after the 9/11 attacks, Congress passed the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of "TRIA".
An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance This paper examines the role of the federal government in the market for terrorism reinsurance. " An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance," NBER Working PapersNational Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
References listed on IDEAS HTML HTML with abstract plain text plain text with abstract BibTeX RIS (EndNote, RefMan, ProCite) ReDIF JSON Brown, Stephen J.
& Warner, Jerold B., Get this from a library. An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance. [Ran Wei; Jeffrey R Brown; J David Cummins; Christopher M Lewis; National Bureau of Economic Research.;] -- This paper examines the role of the federal government in the market for terrorism reinsurance.
We investigate the stock price response of affected industries to a sequence. An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance Jeffrey R. Brown, J. David Cummins, Christopher M. Lewis, and Ran Wei NBER Working Paper No. March JEL No. G14, G22, G28 ABSTRACT This paper examines the role of the federal govern ment in the market for terrorism reinsurance.
WeCited by: An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance. (Conference on Public Policy Macroeconomics of Terrorism). Brown, S. J., & Warner, J.B. ().Author: Najam Ul Sabeeh Najam, Arshad Mehmood Mehmood. Jeffrey R.
Brown, David J. Cummins, Christopher M. Lewis, and Ran Wei, “An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance,” Journal of Monetary Economics Cited by: Download PDF: Sorry, we are unable to provide the full text but you may find it at the following location(s): (external link)Author: V.
Chari. “An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance.” Journal of Monetary Economics, Vol. 51, No. 1, pp. Brück, T. The Economic Analysis of by: This paper indicates how economic analysis can be applied for enlightened policy making with respect to transnational terrorism.
Both theoretical tools (e.g. game theory and utility-maximizing models) and empirical techniques (e.g. time series and spectral analysis) are used to put modern-day terrorism into perspective and to suggest policy by: Brown, Jeffrey R., J. David Cummins, and Christopher M.
Lewis. “An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance,” Working Paper, Wharton Financial Institutions Center, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA. Google ScholarCited by:. CiteSeerX - Document Details (Isaac Councill, Lee Giles, Pradeep Teregowda): This paper examines the role of the federal government in the market for terrorism reinsurance.
We investigate the stock price response of affected industries to a sequence of thirteen events culminating in the enactment of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) of The objective of this article is to outline what we, as researchers, know and, more importantly, what we do not yet know about the consequences of terrorism for financial markets.
I argue that a number of the efforts used to assess quantitatively the risk of terrorist attacks are limited in scope and are hampered by the limits of the databases used to operationalize such models.An Empirical Analysis of the Economic Impact of Federal Terrorism Reinsurance Number of pages: 45 Posted: 15 Mar Jeffrey R.
Brown, J David Cummins, Christopher M. Lewis and Ran Wei.