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What Happened to the U.S. Economy during the 1918 Influenza Pandemic? A View Through High-Frequency Data

François R. Velde

2022The Journal of Economic History29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An economic downturn coincided with the start of the epidemic but the recession was short and moderate, compared with that of 1920/21. Cross-sectional high-frequency data indicate that the epidemic affected the labor supply sharply but briefly with no ensuing spill-overs; most of the recession, brief as it was, was due to the end of the war. I analyze weekly city-level mortality data and economic indicators with time series methods and structural estimation of an economic-epidemiological model: interventions to hinder the contagion reduced mortality at little economic cost, probably because reduced infections mitigated the impact on the labor force.

Topics & Concepts

RecessionInfluenza pandemicPandemicEconomicsEstimationCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Development economicsMacroeconomicsMedicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyDiseaseManagementCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesInfluenza Virus Research StudiesAgricultural risk and resilience
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