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The Macroeconomics of Pandemics in Developing Countries: An Application to Uganda

Tillmann von Carnap, Ingvild Almås, Tessa Bold, Selene Ghisolfi, Justin Sandefur

2020OpenDocs (Institute of Development Studies)18 citationsOpen Access PDF

Abstract

How should policies to control the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic differ across countries? We extend recent contributions integrating economic and epidemiological models for the United States to a developing country context, Uganda. Differences in demography, comorbidities, and health systems affect mortality risk; lower incomes affect agents’ willingness to forego consumption to reduce disease risk. For a broad range of life valuations supported by the literature, optimal containment is significantly less restrictive in the latter context, a normative implication contradicted by positive findings of similarly strict lockdowns across rich and poor countries. We explore biased beliefs about infection risk as a possible explanation.

Topics & Concepts

PandemicContext (archaeology)Development economicsDeveloping countryConsumption (sociology)Affect (linguistics)EconomicsNormativePublic economicsEconomic growthDemographic economicsDiseaseCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Political scienceGeographyMedicinePsychologySociologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawArchaeologySocial scienceCommunicationPathologyCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic Impacts