4.5 Article

JUE Insight: Were urban cowboys enough to control COVID-19? Local shelter-in-place orders and coronavirus case growth

期刊

JOURNAL OF URBAN ECONOMICS
卷 127, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jue.2020.103294

关键词

Coronavirus; Shelter-in-place orders; COVID-19; Urbanicity; Population density

资金

  1. Center for Health Economics & Policy Studies at San Diego State University
  2. Charles Koch Foundation
  3. Troesh Family Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examines the role of localized urban shelter-in-place orders (SIPOs) in reducing COVID-19 cases. The findings show that county-level SIPOs increase the percentage of residents staying at home and decrease foot-traffic at venues that may contribute to the spread of the virus. In urban counties that adopted SIPOs early, there was a significant decrease in COVID-19 case growth. The statewide SIPO implemented later had relatively few health benefits compared to the early adoption by urbanized counties.
One of the most common policy prescriptions to reduce the spread of COVID-19 has been to legally enforce social distancing through shelter-in-place orders (SIPOs). This study examines the role of localized urban SIPO policy in curbing COVID-19 cases. Specifically, we explore (i) the comparative effectiveness of county-level SIPOs in urbanized as compared to non-urbanized areas, (ii) the mechanisms through which SIPO adoption in urban counties yields COVID-related health benefits, and (iii) whether late adoption of a statewide SIPO yields health benefits beyond those achieved from early adopting counties. We exploit the unique laboratory of Texas, a state in which the early adoption of local SIPOs by densely populated counties covered almost two-thirds of the state's population prior to adoption of a statewide SIPO on April 2, 2020. Using an event study framework, we document that countywide SIPO adoption is associated with an 8 percent increase in the percent of residents who remain at home full-time and between a 13 to 19 percent decrease in foot-traffic at venues that may contribute to the spread of COVID-19 such as restaurants, bars, hotels, and entertainment venues. These social distancing effects are largest in urbanized and densely populated counties. Then, we find that in early adopting urban counties, COVID-19 case growth fell by 21 to 26 percentage points two-and-a-half weeks following adoption of a SIPO, a result robust to controls for county-level heterogeneity in COVID-19 outbreak timing, coronavirus testing, the age distribution, and political preferences. We find that approximately 90 percent of the curbed growth in COVID-19 cases in Texas came from the early adoption of SIPOs by urbanized counties, suggesting that the later statewide shelter-in-place mandate yielded relatively few health benefits.

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