A Macroeconomic Model of Healthcare Saturation, Inequality and the Output–Pandemia Trade-off

被引:0
|
作者
Enrique G. Mendoza
Eugenio Rojas
Linda L. Tesar
Jing Zhang
机构
[1] University of Pennsylvania and NBER,
[2] University of Florida,undefined
[3] University of Michigan and NBER,undefined
[4] Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago,undefined
来源
IMF Economic Review | 2023年 / 71卷
关键词
E60; H0; I18;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
COVID-19 became a global health emergency because it threatened the collapse of health systems as demand for health goods and services and their relative prices surged. Governments responded with lockdowns and transfers. Empirical evidence shows that lockdowns and healthcare saturation contribute to explain the cross-country variation in GDP drops even after controlling for COVID-19 cases and mortality. We explain this output–pandemia trade-off as resulting from a shock to subsistence health demand that increases with capital utilization and economic activity in a model with entrepreneurs and workers. The health system saturates as the gap between supply and subsistence narrows, which worsens consumption and income inequality. An externality distorts utilization, because firms do not internalize that lower utilization reduces healthcare saturation. Lockdowns and transfers to workers are the optimal policy response. Quantitatively, strict lockdowns and large transfers yield sizable welfare gains because they neutralize the utilization externality and prevent a sharp rise in inequality. Welfare and output costs vary in response to small parameter changes or deviations from optimal policies. Weak lockdowns coupled with weak transfers programs are the worst alternative and yet are in line with what several emerging and least developed countries implemented.
引用
收藏
页码:243 / 299
页数:56
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Inequality decomposition values: the trade-off between marginality and efficiency
    Frédéric Chantreuil
    Alain Trannoy
    [J]. The Journal of Economic Inequality, 2013, 11 : 83 - 98
  • [22] Institutional determinants of the unemployment-earnings inequality trade-off
    Ayala, L
    Martínez, R
    Ruiz-Huerta, J
    [J]. APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2002, 34 (02) : 179 - 195
  • [23] EMPLOYMENT-OUTPUT TRADE-OFF IN LDCS - MICROECONOMIC APPROACH
    PACK, H
    [J]. OXFORD ECONOMIC PAPERS-NEW SERIES, 1974, 26 (03): : 388 - 404
  • [24] SMALL ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT AND THE EMPLOYMENT-OUTPUT TRADE-OFF
    STEEL, WF
    TAKAGI, Y
    [J]. OXFORD ECONOMIC PAPERS-NEW SERIES, 1983, 35 (03): : 423 - 446
  • [25] The inflation-output variability trade-off: OECD evidence
    Lee, J
    [J]. CONTEMPORARY ECONOMIC POLICY, 2004, 22 (03) : 344 - 356
  • [26] The new Keynesian economics and the output-inflation trade-off
    Katsimbris, GM
    Miller, S
    [J]. APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 1996, 3 (09): : 599 - 602
  • [27] The Inflation-Output Trade-Off with Downward Wage Rigidities
    Benigno, Pierpaolo
    Ricci, Luca Antonio
    [J]. AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2011, 101 (04): : 1436 - 1466
  • [28] THE NEW KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS AND THE OUTPUT-INFLATION TRADE-OFF
    BALL, L
    MANKIW, NG
    ROMER, D
    [J]. BROOKINGS PAPERS ON ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, 1988, (01) : 1 - 65
  • [29] Is there a trade-off between MFls' financial efficiency and outreach in macroeconomic and institutional context?
    Xu, Shufang
    Zhu, Ning
    Copestake, James
    Cai, Guiming
    Peng, Xinman
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF ECONOMICS & FINANCE, 2024, 94
  • [30] A Trade-Off Model of Intentional Thinking for Pleasure
    Raza, Seher
    Westgate, Erin C.
    Buttrick, Nicholas R.
    Heintzelman, Samantha J.
    Furrer, Remy A.
    Gilbert, Daniel T.
    Libby, Lisa K.
    Wilson, Timothy D.
    [J]. EMOTION, 2022, 22 (01) : 115 - 128