Litcius/Paper detail

Political and Social Correlates of Covid-19 Mortality

Constantin Manuel Bosancianu, Hanno Hilbig, Macartan Humphreys, Sampada KC, Nils Lieber, Alexandra Scacco

202019 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

What political and social features of states help explain the distribution of reported Covid-19 deaths? We survey existing works on (1) state capacity, (2) political institutions, (3) political priorities, and (4) social structures to identify national-level political and social characteristics that may help explain variation in the ability of societies to limit Covid-19 mortality. Accounting for a simple set of Lasso-chosen controls, we find that measures of interpersonal and institutional trust are persistently associated with reported Covid-19 deaths in theory-consistent directions. Beyond this, however, patterns are poorly predicted by existing theories, and by arguments in the popular press focused on populist governments, women-led governments, and pandemic preparedness. Expert predictions of mortality patterns associated with state capacity, democracy, and inequality, do no better than chance. Overall, our analysis highlights the challenges our discipline's theories face in accounting for political responses to unanticipated, society-wide crises.

Topics & Concepts

PoliticsBureaucracyGovernment (linguistics)AccountabilityPolitical sciencePandemicLanguage changePolitical economyDevelopment economicsCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)SociologyDiseaseEconomicsMedicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawLiteraturePhilosophyPathologyLinguisticsArtCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts