Author
Listed:
- Kostiantyn Pavlov
(Faculty of Economics and Management, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University, Voli Ave., 13, 43025 Lutsk, Ukraine
Faculty of Economics and Management, Vytautas Magnus University, K. Donelaičio Str. 58, 44248 Kaunas, Lithuania)
- Oksana Liashenko
(Faculty of Economics and Management, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University, Voli Ave., 13, 43025 Lutsk, Ukraine
Loughborough Business School, Loughborough University, Epinal Way, Loughborough LE11 3TU, UK)
- Olena Pavlova
(Faculty of Economics and Management, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University, Voli Ave., 13, 43025 Lutsk, Ukraine
Faculty of Management, AGH University of Krakow, Al. Mickiewicz 30, 30-059 Kraków, Poland)
- Tomasz Wołowiec
(Faculty of Administration and Social Sciences, WSEI University in Lublin, Projektowa 4, 20-209 Lublin, Poland)
- Przemysław Bochenek
(Faculty of Social Sciences and Informatics, School of Business, National-Louis University, Grunwaldzka 17, 33-300 Nowy Sącz, Poland)
- Kamila Ćwik
(Faculty of Administration and Social Sciences, WSEI University in Lublin, Projektowa 4, 20-209 Lublin, Poland)
- Tetiana Vlasenko
(Academy of Silesia, ul. Rolna 43, 40-555 Katowice, Poland
Business and Administration Department, Simon Kuznets Kharkiv National University of Economics, Nauky Ave., 9-A, 61165 Kharkiv, Ukraine)
Abstract
Despite the well-documented acceleration of climate-related economic losses in Europe, existing research has largely treated these damages as isolated stochastic events rather than as structurally embedded fiscal risks. This gap leaves EU fiscal governance frameworks inadequately prepared for the persistent, spatially concentrated, and temporally dependent nature of such losses. This study addresses this gap by investigating the systemic transformation of climate-related economic risks within the European Union, arguing that climate losses have evolved from unpredictable stochastic shocks into a persistent, structural burden on the European economy. Adopting a comprehensive multi-methodological approach, the research quantifies this transition by integrating spatial concentration metrics (HHI), advanced time-series modelling (OLS, ARIMA, ETS), and anomaly detection techniques to analyse loss patterns across the EU-27 from 1980 to 2023. The empirical results demonstrate three critical systemic dimensions: (1) a statistically significant upward shift in the baseline of economic damages; (2) a high geographical concentration of losses, with Germany, Italy, and France consistently bearing the largest share of climate-driven fiscal pressure; and (3) the emergence of volatility clustering, indicating that climate risks are becoming increasingly non-linear and embedded in the macroeconomic environment. The study contributes to the literature by reframing climate-related economic losses as a systemic fiscal phenomenon requiring structural governance reform, rather than ad hoc disaster response. The findings suggest that existing reactive policy frameworks are insufficient to address the scale of these structural risks. Consequently, the paper advocates for a paradigm shift in EU climate policy—moving toward anticipatory fiscal instruments, harmonised resilience financing, and monitoring systems designed to mitigate systemic volatility and cross-country economic asymmetry rather than merely responding to isolated disaster events.
Suggested Citation
Kostiantyn Pavlov & Oksana Liashenko & Olena Pavlova & Tomasz Wołowiec & Przemysław Bochenek & Kamila Ćwik & Tetiana Vlasenko, 2026.
"From Stochastic Shocks to Structural Burden: Quantifying Systemic Climate-Related Economic Risks in the European Union,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(6), pages 1-23, March.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:6:p:3009-:d:1898736
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