4.6 Article

Trade, uneven development and people in motion: Used territories and the initial spread of COVID-19 in Mesoamerica and the Caribbean

Journal

SOCIO-ECONOMIC PLANNING SCIENCES
Volume 80, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.seps.2021.101161

Keywords

Delinking; Free trade; Pandemic spread; Relational geographies; Equity in health

Funding

  1. SENACYT, Panama [COVID-19-226]
  2. Canada Research Chairs Program
  3. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  4. WestGrid
  5. Compute Canada
  6. University of British Columbia

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This study examines the factors influencing the spread of COVID-19 in Mesoamerica and the Caribbean, and finds that uneven development, trade openness, and international city connections have an impact on the number of cases and deaths. Countries with higher trade dependence and uneven development have more severe outbreaks. These results highlight the importance of economic integration in the transmission of the virus.
Mesoamerica and the Caribbean form a region comprised by middle-and low-income countries affected by the COVID-19 pandemic differently. Here, we ask whether the spread of COVID-19, measured using early epidemic growth rates (r), reproduction numbers (Rt), accumulated cases, and deaths, is influenced by how the 'used territories' across the regions have been differently shaped by uneven development, human movement and trade differences. Using an econometric approach, we found that trade openness increased cases and deaths, while the number of international cities connected at main airports increased r, cases and deaths. Similarly, increases in concentration of imports, a sign of uneven development, coincided with increases in early epidemic growth and deaths. These results suggest that countries whose used territory was defined by a less uneven development were less likely to show exacerbated COVID-19 patterns of transmission. Health outcomes were worst in more trade dependent countries, even after controlling for the impact of transmission prevention and mitigation policies, highlighting how structural effects of economic integration in used territories were associated with the initial COVID-19 spread in Mesoamerica and the Caribbean.

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