From Risk to Reward: New Research Finds Increased Payoff from Disaster Resilience Investments
Resilience spending saves jobs and lives, cuts GDP losses and protects communities from higher economic costs when disasters strike
Beyond the Payoff: How Investments in Resilience and Disaster Preparedness Protect Communities builds on the partners’ 2024 study, The Preparedness Payoff.
The new research models the economic impacts of investment scenarios across five major disaster types and calculates impacts by disaster type.
Disaster Type |
Cost of Not Investing in Resilience
|
Key Impacts from Lower Resilience
|
Hurricanes |
|
Up to 131,000 jobs lost
|
Tornadoes |
|
14,500+ jobs lost
|
Wildfires |
|
9,800+ jobs lost
|
Droughts |
|
19,200+ jobs lost
|
Floods |
|
13,700+ jobs lost
|
Key findings include:
- When communities reduce resilience investments, they risk facing more than 30 times that amount in lost future economic activity over the next decade.
- Resilience funding offers economic protection and stabilizes local labor markets, regardless of size or type of disaster. In hurricane-prone areas, investment can prevent the loss of more than 70,000 jobs.
- Local efforts matter. The report outlines six “Levers of Resilience” that local leaders can use to strengthen preparedness, from infrastructure upgrades to community engagement initiatives.
The report also features insights from emergency managers, engineers, and resilience experts, highlighting the need for cross-sector collaboration and streamlined processes to ensure rapid resource sharing, coordinated decision-making, and recovery efforts that are aligned with local priorities.
Rich Loconte, senior vice president, Government & Industry Relations at Allstate
“After more than 25 years on the ground with Allstate’s National Catastrophe Team, we know firsthand that preparedness is as much about plans as it is people. It’s supporting a local nonprofit to retain its employees and keeps its doors open after a disaster, working with civic leaders to develop recovery plans that minimize rebuilding costs and educating community members on proactive investments that help better weather storms.”
Marty Durbin, senior vice president, Policy at the
“As the cost and economic toll of disasters continue to increase, leaders at all levels of government should know that investments in infrastructure resilience will go a long way in protecting and preparing local communities. Resilience investments reduce costs and speed up recovery. The faster a community bounces back, the faster jobs and economic growth return.”
Marc DeCourcey, senior vice president at the
“Coordination between the public and private sectors needs improvement when it comes to resilience and recovery efforts. Funding is essential, but so is making sure resources are used effectively and partners are working together to deliver the best outcomes.”
The full report is available here.
Supporting Communities and Small Businesses
This study adds to a growing portfolio of research and resources produced jointly by the
The partnership builds on Allstate’s work to strengthen communities and protect customers before and after disasters and the
More information on the
About Allstate
The Allstate Corporation (NYSE: ALL) protects people from life’s uncertainties with a wide array of protection for autos, homes, electronic devices, and identities. Products are available through a broad distribution network including Allstate agents, independent agents, major retailers, online, and at the workplace. Allstate is widely known for the slogan “You’re in Good Hands with Allstate.” For more information, visit www.allstate.com.
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Source: Allstate