Litcius/Paper detail

God is in the rain: The impact of rainfall-induced early social distancing on COVID-19 outbreaks

Ajay Shenoy, Bhavyaa Sharma, Guanghong Xu, Rolly Kapoor, Haedong Aiden Rho, Kinpritma Sangha

2021Journal of Health Economics47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We measure the benefit to society created by preventing COVID-19 deaths through a marginal increase in early social distancing. We exploit county-level rainfall on the last weekend before statewide lockdown in the early phase of the pandemic. After controlling for historical rainfall, temperature, and state fixed-effects, current rainfall is a plausibly exogenous instrument for social distancing. A one percent decrease in the population leaving home on the weekend before lockdown creates an average of 132 dollars of benefit per county resident within 2 weeks. The impacts of earlier distancing compound over time and mainly arise from lowering the risk of a major outbreak, yielding large but unevenly distributed social benefit.

Topics & Concepts

Social distanceCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PandemicOutbreakSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)2019-20 coronavirus outbreakDistancingPopulationGeographyDemographyDemographic economicsMedicineEconomicsSociologyVirologyDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsAgricultural risk and resilience