Leeds researchers uncover lopsided support for Hurricane Harvey victims.
Disaster relief is meant to be a safety net for lower-income victims, says Professor Emily Gallagher of the Leeds School of Business鈥攂ut the reality is that most aid goes to the upper middle class.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey, Gallagher and fellow Leeds professor Stephen Billings conducted the first-ever study about how Federal Emergency Management Association (FEMA) grants are distributed. They evaluated victims鈥 credit scores, median income and minority shares of neighborhoods鈥攄iscovering vast inequalities in aid.
A dramatic disparity
Hurricane Harvey hit Houston in 2017 as a Category 4 storm, with $125 billion in damages and massive flooding; most occurred outside of Houston鈥檚 100-year floodplain, where flood insurance is optional.
After the storm, researchers found that financially insecure residents received little
federal disaster assistance鈥攑ushing many into bankruptcy and forcing some to sell
their beyond-repair homes.
But not all groups were adversely affected by the flooding. Wealthy residents were given a good deal of relief. They had greater access to cash grants and large loans with super-low-interest rates, allowing them to refinance their mortgages and rebuild their homes.
鈥淭he more we dug into things, the more we realized that disaster assistance acts more like a reinvestment stimulus program for the upper middle class,鈥 says Gallagher.
How the system is skewed
For victims of a disaster, financial support comes from insurance (high premiums make this unaffordable for low-income households), FEMA cash grants, and lowinterest loans from the Small Business Administration (SBA).
The average SBA loan given to Harvey victims ($74,549) was enough to cover property damage caused by the flooding. Those who were denied an SBA loan due to low credit scores or income suffered a serious hit to their recovery prospects. (Most high-income residents, on the other hand, qualified easily.)
The average recipient of a FEMA grant received $7,300鈥攍ess than a loan but highly desirable, since grants don鈥檛 have to be paid back. However, the program unintentionally creates hurdles for low-income applicants鈥攊ncluding tight restrictions on who qualifies, how funds can be used, and costly legal help to tackle complicated paperwork.
Fixing what鈥檚 broken
Gallagher and Billings, along with co-author Lowell Ricketts of the Federal Reserve Banks of St. Louis, offered strong recommendations to policymakers on how to make disaster relief equitable.
They proposed federal buyouts of flood-prone properties, careful zoning and flood control, affordable flood insurance, redrawn floodplain maps, elimination of FEMA grant earmarking, and extended repayment periods on SBA loans.
These remedies, they say, can alleviate the financial burdens placed on low-income households in future disasters.