The indirect effects of nuclear power plant accidents on population dynamics

Authors
Affiliations

Osaka School of International Public Policy

Mitsubishi UFJ Research and Consulting Co., Ltd.

Shuko Harada

Osaka School of International Public Policy

Published

April 17, 2025

Abstract

Most studies have focused on the economic consequences of disaster shocks, but the broader impact on areas outside the disaster remains unclear. Using the shock of the Great East Japan Earthquake and cross-municipality variation in the locations of nuclear power plants unrelated to the earthquake, this paper shows the indirect impact of disasters on population dynamics. The earthquake triggered nuclear power plant accidents, which heightened residents’ risk perceptions of the plants. We find that population inflows to and outflows from municipalities with nuclear power plants decreased after the earthquake. The effects could also be driven by the residents’ risk perceptions and falling land prices. Our findings suggest that policymakers and researchers need to consider the broader extent of disaster effects more carefully.

URL: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13504851.2025.2493771

BibTeX

@article{notsu_indirect_2025,
    title = {The indirect effects of nuclear power plant accidents on population dynamics},
    issn = {1350-4851},
    url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/13504851.2025.2493771},
    doi = {10.1080/13504851.2025.2493771},
    journal = {Applied Economics Letters},
    author = {Notsu, Naruki and Abe, Yosuke and Harada, Shuko},
    year = {2025},
    note = {Publisher: Routledge},
    pages = {1--6},
}