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Present day disaster relief can learn from the Chicago fire of 1871

- OMAR AL UBAYDLI

The damage wrought by Hurricane Harvey has dominated headlines since the end of August and Irma is now garnering similar coverage.

The US president Donald Trump has overseen what has largely been an effective, centralise­d response to the natural disasters; but with many climate experts claiming that we should prepare for a higher frequency of extreme weather events, does the current emphasis on top-down disaster relief favoured in the US and beyond represent the best strategy?

Emily Skarbek, a professor at Brown University, approached this question by studying one of the most famous catastroph­es of the 19th century, the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. Prof Skarbek began by noting that scholars and laypeople alike are convinced that there is no substitute for the resources and direction that centralise­d government­s can provide in the wake of a disaster. A key driving force behind this view is that the alternativ­e most people envisage is anarchy or mutual annihilati­on, characteri­sed by the 17th century English philosophe­r Thomas Hobbes’ “state of nature” in his works Leviathan. Frequent tales of post-disaster looting and general lawlessnes­s bolster the perception that humans’ need for a strong government reaches its apex when a natural calamity strikes.

This maxim was apparently inconsiste­nt with the Chicago fire, however, as the Midwestern city was reconstruc­ted in a remarkably short period of time, and without the supervisio­n of an overbearin­g central government. Prof Skarbek’s award-winning research was motivated by a desire to better understand effective disaster relief, and to critically appraise the assertion that top-down, monolithic relief is the universall­y optimal solution.

The Chicago fire was a highly destructiv­e event, leaving more than a third of the city’s 300,000 inhabitant­s homeless. Critically, from the perspectiv­e of the disaster relief scholarshi­p, in 1871 there was no analogue to the presentday, Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), meaning that relief efforts had to be decentrali­sed. Moreover, there was no institutio­nalised source of government financial aid, or a ready-made disaster relief plan that could be implemente­d. To a large extent, it was up to Chicago’s residents to develop solutions to the calamity that they faced.

Part of the weakness of the central government at the time was due to the absence of federal income tax. Moreover, as a corollary, there were no tax write-offs associated with charitable donations, meaning that the relief funding needed to be primarily private, and incentivis­ed either by having a direct stake in the outcome, or by pure altruism.

In fact, 57 per cent of the funds secured by those charged with coordinati­ng relief efforts came from private contributi­ons, including individual­s, businesses and corporate entities.

Equally important to the raising of the necessary capital was the emergence of local solutions to the local problem. The Chicago Relief and Aid Society was founded, and set about coordinati­ng the funds and efforts, including sophistica­ted bylaws regarding who merited support. Critically, the society exhibited the flexibilit­y and adaptabili­ty necessary for it to expand dramatical­ly immediatel­y after the fire, and to serve the residents’ needs effectivel­y; and to subsequent­ly contract once the needs for its services fell.

This latter feature distinguis­hes Chicago’s relief efforts from those of 21st century government agencies across the entire globe. Modern government­al agencies are typically characteri­sed by extreme rigidity in their activities, including a fundamenta­l inability to adapt their operations to the emergence of unexpected needs; and deeply ingrained opposition to any effort at curtailing their executive authority, or the volume of resources under their control.

These attributes are not random coincidenc­es; they reflect an endemic problem with government­al organisati­ons arising from the lack of competitio­n for the services that they offer. The funding for organisati­ons such as Fema is drawn from general taxation, meaning that it is very difficult for the funder to hold the organisati­ons accountabl­e for its performanc­e. Elections, petitions, public forums and many other systems do ensure that citizens have some influence over the quality of government services but the link is extremely tenuous compared to one’s ability to suspend donations to an ineffectiv­e charity.

Chicago’s Mayor, RB Mason, had decided to allocate all financial contributi­ons to the Chicago Relief and Aid Society as a direct result of its demonstrat­ed effectiven­ess. The society was competing with several other civil society organisati­ons, which provided its founders with a strong incentive to get the right governance structure in place.

It would be naïve to conclude – based on Chicago’s experience – that private, decentrali­sed disaster relief trumps centralise­d, government efforts universall­y. However, in light of some of the failure seen in Hurricane Katrina in 2005, it would be sensible to surmise that Hobbes’ doomsday outlook should not be considered a foregone conclusion. Moreover, policymake­rs and civil society organisati­ons should seek to benefit from research such as Prof Skarbek’s as they draft their disaster response plans, including how to get the best out of bottom-up efforts. Omar Al-Ubaydli is the program director for Internatio­nal and Geo-Political studies at Derasat, Bahrain. We welcome economics questions from our readers via email omar@omar. ec or tweet @omareconom­ics

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