Slums and Pandemics

Publication date

2023-06-21T07:53:08Z

2023-06-21T07:53:08Z

2022-06-01

2023-06-21T07:53:08Z

Abstract

How do slums shape the economic and health dynamics of pandemics? A difference-in-differences analysis using millions of mobile phones in Brazil shows that residents of overcrowded slums engaged in less social distancing after the outbreak of Covid-19. We develop and calibrate a choice-theoretic equilibrium model in which individuals are heterogeneous in income and some people live in high-density slums. Slum residents account for a disproportionately high number of infections and deaths and, without slums, deaths increase in non-slum neighborhoods. Policy analysis of reallocation of medical resources, lockdowns and cash transfers produce heterogeneous effects across groups. Policy simulations indicate that: reallocating medical resources cuts deaths and raises output and the welfare of both groups; mild lockdowns favor slum individuals by mitigating the demand for hospital beds, whereas strict confinements mostly delay the evolution of the pandemic; and cash transfers benefit slum residents to the detriment of others, highlighting important distributional effects.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Elsevier

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2022.102882

Journal of Development Economics, 2022, vol. 157, num. 102882, p. 1-18

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2022.102882

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Elsevier, 2022

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/

This item appears in the following Collection(s)