Abstract

Climate disasters pose a risk to residents’ well-being globally. However, information about the impact of climate disasters among urban and rural residents remains lacking, especially in Indonesia. This study aims to fill the gap by investigating the impact of climate disaster on subjective well-being based on urban and rural typology model. The data were cross-sectional, involving 7110 Indonesian residents who had experienced climate disasters, 3813 from urban areas and 3297 from rural areas. An ordered probit model was employed to estimate the impact of climate disasters on subjective well-being (i.e., happiness and life satisfaction). In general, the empirical results show that climate disasters do not significantly affect the happiness of Indonesian residents, but they significantly and negatively impact their life satisfaction. Further analysis reveals that climate disasters impact urban and rural residents differently. The subjective well-being of rural residents is more severely affected than those living in urban areas. Further estimation also indicated that climate disaster significantly reduces residents’ subjective well-being at the lowest income level for both rural and urban residents. Our finding confirms that rural residents remain the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.

Highlights

  • The current study aims to investigate the impact of climate disaster on subjective well-being based on the urban and rural typology model

  • The average values of subjective well-being indicators are 2.9809 for happiness and 3.2446 for life satisfaction. This finding suggests that the well-being of Indonesian residents who had experienced climate disasters was relatively good

  • The results indicate that the climate disasters do not significantly affect urban residents’ happiness and life satisfaction

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change has impacted the environment and various aspects of human life in recent decades. Its immediate indicator is the change in global temperature [1], which has risen by nearly 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit since 1880 [2]. Droughts, tropical cyclones, and earthquakes are some of the catastrophic impacts, which have happened more frequently across the globe. Fang et al [3] reported that there have been 13,386 climate disasters globally since 1970, resulting in 3.6 million deaths, 7.7 billion casualties, and Sustainability 2022, 14, 3383. The occurrences of climate disasters are anticipated to increase in intensity and frequency [4].

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