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Save lives or save livelihoods? A cross-country analysis of COVID-19 pandemic and economic growth.

Authors :
Feng, Qu
Wu, Guiying Laura
Yuan, Mengying
Zhou, Shihao
Source :
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. May2022, Vol. 197, p221-256. 36p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

• A cross-country analysis identifying risk and protective factors on the COVID-19 deaths. • Ranking of 100 countries based on the proposed pandemic containment effectiveness (PCE) score. • Positive relationship between the PCE score and economic growth in major economies. • A counterfactual analysis discussing the tradeoff between the PCE scores and GDP growth. This paper studies whether containing COVID-19 pandemic by stringent strategies deteriorates or saves economic growth. Since there are country-specific factors that could affect both economic growth and deaths due to COVID-19, we first start with a cross-country analysis on identifying risk and protective factors on the COVID-19 deaths using large across-country variation. Using data on 100 countries from 3 January to 27 November 2020 and taking into account the possibility of underreporting, we find that for deaths per million population, GDP per capita, population density, and income inequality are the three most important risk factors; government effectiveness, temperature, and hospital beds are the three most important protective factors. Second, inspired by the stochastic frontier literature, we construct a measure of pandemic containment effectiveness (PCE) after controlling for country-specific factors and rank countries by their PCE scores for deaths. Finally, by linking the PCE score with GDP growth data in Quarters 2 and 3 of 2020, we find that PCE is positively associated with economic growth in major economies. Countries with average PCE scores, such as Malaysia, would gain more GDP growth by 3.47 percentage points if they could improve their PCE scores for deaths to South Korea's level in Q2 of 2020. Therefore, there is not a trade-off between lives and livelihood facing by governments. Instead, to save economy, it is important to contain the pandemic first. Our conclusion is also mainly valid for infections due to COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01672681
Volume :
197
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156502214
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2022.02.027