4.7 Article

On the economic growth equilibria during the Covid-19 pandemic

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cnsns.2022.106573

Keywords

Economic growth modeling; Growth traps; Labor force; Pandemics

Funding

  1. DESP-University of Urbino

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The paper aims to investigate the impact of Covid-19 pandemic suppression policies on labor supply, capital accumulation, and economic growth. The study combines an epidemic SIS population model and a Solow's type growth model, integrating economics and epidemiology. The research reveals the creation and destruction of economic growth equilibria influenced by suppression policies and disease severity. The stability of equilibria is mainly determined by the stringency of suppression policies, proportion of infected workers, recovery rate of workers, and the economy's saving rate. The findings demonstrate that economies can fall into a stable equilibrium of poverty trap or converge towards high economic growth with capital accumulation, depending on the savings rate and the performance of suppression policies. The scenario is complex with multiple equilibria and bifurcation paths. Numerical simulations support the results.
The aim of this paper is to study the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic suppression policies (i.e. containment measures or lockdowns) on labor supply, capital accumulation, and so the economic growth. We merge an epidemic SIS population model and a Solow's type growth model, i.e. we propose a fusion between economics and epidemiology. We show the creation and the destruction of economic growth equilibria driven by the suppression policies and by the severity of the disease. The dynamic stability properties of the equilibria are mainly determined by (i) the stringency of the suppression policies, (ii) the proportion of infected workers, (iii) the recovery rate of workers, and (iv) the economy's saving rate. Thus, economies can fall into the stable equilibrium of the poverty trap if the propensity to save is low and the economic policies that reduce the spread of infection are severe enough with high levels of infection and low rates of illness recovery. Otherwise, with high savings rates and if the suppression policies perform in such a way that infection levels are low and recovery rates are high, then the economies converge towards the equilibrium of high economic growth with capital accumulation. The scenario is rather complex since there is a multiplicity of equilibria such that economies can be in one scenario or another, characterized by stability or (structural) instability, i.e. bifurcation paths. Numerical simulations corroborate our results. (C) 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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