4.0 Article

Pandemic effects in the Solow growth model

Journal

BULLETIN OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
Volume 75, Issue 3, Pages 671-687

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/boer.12376

Keywords

COVID-19; SIS; SIR; Solow model

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This study demonstrates how diseases can impact economic growth by using the Solow growth model, indicating that diseases lead to a decrease in output per capita and a contraction in the economy's production possibilities frontier.
We show how diseases can affect economic growth in a Solow growth model, with population growth and no technical progress, but modified to include a saving rate that depends on the individual health status. We successively insert this model into the SIS (susceptible-infected-susceptible) and SIR (susceptible-infected-recovered) models of disease spreading. In these two models, the spread of the infection proceeds according to the so-called basic reproductive number. This number determines in which of the two possible equilibria, the disease-free or the pandemic equilibrium, the economy ends. We show that output per capita is always lower in the pandemic steady state, which implies a contraction in the economy's production possibilities frontier.

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