The role of subjective risk perceptions in shaping coastal development dynamics
Authored by Nicolas R Magliocca, Margaret Walls
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.compenvurbsys.2018.03.009
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/5637/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
Social and economic costs in coastal zones resulting from natural hazard
events, such as hurricanes, are increasing. Household residential
location decisions and adaptive behaviors (i.e., purchasing insurance)
are influenced by perceived risk of storms events, and can have
long-term consequences for development patterns and regional resilience.
Perceived risks may be capitalized into housing prices in hazardous
areas, but the attraction of coastal amenities may dampen market
responses to risk information. Empirical studies provide contradictory
conclusions about the effect of storm events on housing market dynamics,
and thus the decision-making processes leading to post-storm residential
location and insurance purchase choices remain unclear. Here, an
economic agent-based model (ABM) of coupled housing and land markets
(CHALMS), adapted to a coastal setting, or C-CHALMS, is used to
investigate alternative decision-making models and associated behavioral
mechanisms driving post-storm responses. A pattern-oriented modeling
(POM) and abductive reasoning approach is used to compare the ability of
alternative decision-making models to explain empirical patterns of
housing and insurance market dynamics. By explicitly modeling individual
decision-making, results demonstrate that post-storm location and
insurance purchasing decisions vary greatly within a coastal landscape.
Coastal amenities dampen the effects of storm events on housing price
dynamics for properties immediately adjacent to the coast, while areas
with the lowest risk of damages (and lowest coastal amenities) are most
responsive to storm events. Further, psychological factors, such as the
perceived salience of positive and negative consequences, explain
dynamics of insurance policy uptake after storms better than rational
economic decision-making alone.
Tags
Agent-based model
emergence
Land-use change
Landscape
expected utility
Events
Responses
Amenities
Land
Losses
Flood insurance
Natural hazards
Behavioral theories
Disaster resilience
Salience theory