4.7 Article

Can commercial trade represent the main indicator of the COVID-19 diffusion due to human-to-human interactions? A comparative analysis between Italy, France, and Spain

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 201, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.111529

Keywords

COVID-19; Coronavirus; SARS-CoV-2 spread; Pandemic crisis; Import-export; Population density; Fatality rate; Public health; Gross domestic product (GDP)

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The study aims to analyze the relationship between commercial trade and pandemic severity to support new hypotheses explaining COVID-19 transmission dynamics and policy responses. The research focuses on three large European countries and suggests that international trade data can be used as a comprehensive indicator for population density, economic dynamism, and human mobility. The results highlight the importance of focusing on infections outside national boundaries to manage pandemic threats effectively.
The main goal of this study is to analyze the relation between commercial trade and pandemic severity in society, in order to support new hypotheses which can explain transmission dynamics of COVID-19, as well as promote policy responses to cope with future epidemics similar to COVID-19. This study considers the role of trade in the dynamics of pandemic diffusion, within and between countries, which has not been investigated yet in this emerging field of research. We focus on three large countries in Europe: Italy, France, and Spain. The analysis is performed at regional level (involving in total 52 European regions). Results suggest that the association between trade and pandemic severity seems to be supported by empirical evidence, making it possible to introduce new hypotheses for explaining transmission dynamics of COVID-19 within and between countries. In particular, international trade data is supposed to be used as a comprehensive indicator accounting for population density, economic dynamism, and human mobility. The statistical analyses, also in a multivariate context, strongly support this hypothesis and suggest that crisis management has to focus in the very first place on infections occurring outside the national boundaries, in order to cope with pandemic threat of new waves of COVID-19 and future similar epidemics/pandemics.

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