COVID-19: effectiveness of socioeconomic factors in containing the spread and mortality

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
COVID-19: effectiveness of socioeconomic factors in containing the spread and mortality
Abstract
This paper presents a study on 80 countries that evaluates the socioeconomic factors in containing the spread and mortality of COVID-19. Our results show that the long-term social factors such as lower personal freedom, better education in science, and past coronavirus outbreak experience are more effective than the economic factors such as higher healthcare-associated factors per 1000 population and larger GDP. However, using GDP per capita as the instrumental variable, we also find that the richer countries with a high degree of personal freedom have a higher number of infection or death cases per million population because they would be less likely to adhere to and implement the policy of the movement restrictions to restrict their access to goods and services. © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Publication
International Review of Applied Economics
Date
MAR 4 2021
Volume
35
Issue
2
Pages
164–187
Citation Key
angCOVID19EffectivenessSocioeconomic2021
ISSN
02692171
Language
english
Extra
7 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Type: Article tex.citation: https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopusid/85097015963
Citation
Ang, J. P., Dong, F., & Patalinghug, J. (2021). COVID-19: effectiveness of socioeconomic factors in containing the spread and mortality. International Review of Applied Economics, 35(2), 164–187. https://doi.org/10.1080/02692171.2020.1853078