Litcius/Paper detail

The common interests of health protection and the economy: evidence from scenario calculations of COVID-19 containment policies

Florian Dorn, Sahamoddin Khailaie, Marc Stoeckli, Sebastian Binder, Tanmay Mitra, Berit Lange, Stefan Lautenbacher, Andreas Peichl, Patrizio Vanella, Timo Wollmershäuser, Clemens Fuest, Michael Meyer‐Hermann

2022The European Journal of Health Economics26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We develop a novel approach integrating epidemiological and economic models that allows data-based simulations during a pandemic. We examine the economically optimal opening strategy that can be reconciled with the containment of a pandemic. The empirical evidence is based on data from Germany during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Our empirical findings reject the view that there is necessarily a conflict between health protection and economic interests and suggest a non-linear U-shape relationship: it is in the interest of public health and the economy to balance non-pharmaceutical interventions in a manner that further reduces the incidence of infections. Our simulations suggest that a prudent strategy that leads to a reproduction number of around 0.75 is economically optimal. Too restrictive policies cause massive economic costs. Conversely, policies that are too loose lead to higher death tolls and higher economic costs in the long run. We suggest this finding as a guide for policy-makers in balancing interests of public health and the economy during a pandemic.

Topics & Concepts

PandemicEmpirical evidenceEconomic costPublic healthContainment (computer programming)Public economicsBalance (ability)EconomicsEconomic impact analysisPublic health interventionsEmpirical researchPsychological interventionCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)BusinessMicroeconomicsMedicinePsychiatryPhilosophyInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseProgramming languagePhysical medicine and rehabilitationNursingComputer sciencePathologyEpistemologyCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsAgricultural risk and resilience