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The Effect of Health and Economic Costs on Governments’ Policy Responses to <scp>COVID</scp>‐19 Crisis under Incomplete Information

Germà Bel, Óscar Gasulla, Ferran A. Mazaira‐Font

2021Public Administration Review39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has become an unprecedented health, economic, and social crisis. The present study has built a theoretical model and used it to develop an empirical strategy, analyzing the drivers of policy-response agility during the outbreak. Our empirical results show that national policy responses were delayed, both by government expectations of the healthcare system capacity and by expectations that any hard measures used to manage the crisis would entail severe economic costs. With decision-making based on incomplete information, the agility of national policy responses increased as knowledge increased and uncertainty decreased in relation to the epidemic's evolution and the policy responses of other countries.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)2019-20 coronavirus outbreakCrisis responseBusinessEconomicsPublic economicsPolitical scienceVirologyPublic relationsMedicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)OutbreakPathologyDiseaseCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesAgricultural risk and resilienceCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
The Effect of Health and Economic Costs on Governments’ Policy Responses to <scp>COVID</scp>‐19 Crisis under Incomplete Information | Litcius