Litcius/Paper detail

Epidemiological and Economic Effects of Lockdown

A. Arnon, John Paul Ricco, Kent Smetters

2020Brookings Papers on Economic Activity44 citationsDOI

Abstract

We examine the period of national lockdown beginning in March 2020 using an integrated epidemiological-econometric framework in which health and economic outcomes are jointly determined. We augment a state-level compartmental model with behavioral responses to nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) and to local epidemiological conditions. To calibrate the model, we construct daily, county-level measures of contact rates and employment and estimate key parameters with an event study design. We have three main findings: First, NPIs introduced by state and local governments explain a small fraction of the nationwide decline in contact rates but nevertheless reduced COVID-19 deaths by about 25 percent - saving about 39, 000 lives - over the first three months of the pandemic. However, NPIs also explain nearly 15 percent of the decline in employment - around 3 million jobs - over the same period. Second, NPIs that target individual behavior (such as stay-at-home orders) were more effective at reducing transmission at lower economic cost than those that target businesses (shutdowns). Third, an aggressive and well-designed response in the early stages of the pandemic could have improved both epidemiological and economic outcomes over the medium term.

Topics & Concepts

EpidemiologyPandemicPsychological interventionDemographic economicsCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Econometric modelEconomic impact analysisEnvironmental healthEconomicsDemographyBusinessEconomic growthMedicineEconometricsDiseaseSociologyPathologyPsychiatryInfectious disease (medical specialty)Internal medicineMicroeconomicsCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsCOVID-19 and Mental Health