This set of lessons looks at a variety of natural disasters – from the Black Death of the Middle Ages to Hurricane Katrina in our too-recent memory, to fears of avian flu pandemics that haunt the future – through the lens of economic analysis. The contexts were chosen to facilitate the teaching of economic reasoning principles not only in economics courses, but also in history and the other social studies disciplines. Each lesson addresses a question that reflects people’s compassionate reaction to news of disaster and develops one or two key tools of economic analysis in answering that question. Case studies of past disasters provide real-world illustrations.
Program Topics
Introduction
Addendum to Introduction
Lesson 1: Are Disasters Good for the Economy?
Lesson 2: When Disaster Strikes, What Can Markets Do?
Lesson 3: When Disaster Strikes, What Can Government Do?
Lesson 4: When Disaster Strikes, What Can We Do?
Lesson 5: Are Disasters “A Disaster” for Lesson Planning?
Activities