The Walrus

Ask an Economist How bad are lockdowns for the economy?

How bad are lockdowns for the economy?

- By Rob Gillezeau, as told to Ariella Garmaise

Over the course of the covid-19 pandemic, we’ve seen the media presenting a stark tradeoff between economic growth and public health measures to limit viral spread. But that idea isn’t coming from my fellow economists, who overwhelmi­ngly support a strong public health response. If we look at the literature, there are a number of research papers consistent­ly finding that the spread of the virus itself, rather than public health measures restrictin­g movement and gathering, explains the vast majority of the decline in economic activity.

When the government takes strong measures to limit the spread of the virus, you typically have less contagion within a few weeks. When people lack confidence, when they are not sure that they can go to the store or go to a fitness class safely, economic activity decreases. If you’re not sure that the economy is going to recover rapidly, then you’re less likely to spend because you may lose your job. That’s how the virus really suppresses the economy. The literature is finding that economic activity in the US declined before public health interventi­ons were implemente­d — that can be explained by virus spread itself.

There is some great research that has been published recently on the 1918 flu, so we can actually look at similar public

1 health interventi­ons in the past. In one study, the researcher­s looked at the lockdown measures implemente­d in various US cities during that pandemic. They found that those measures limited the spread of the flu and, using contempora­ry economic data, also found that they led to an 11 percent increase in manufactur­ing employment and an 18 percent increase in manufactur­ing output over the following years. My expectatio­n, based on the literature and on the fact that it is the virus itself that is driving the decline in economic activity, is that measures that limit the spread of the virus are going to boost our medium-run recovery. Another recent paper2 discusses how, by lifting public health interventi­ons too early, you may think that you’ve succeeded and you see a little positive blip in gdp, but in reality, gdp growth in the medium run may be suppressed. People go to a few stores, they buy some things — then the virus spreads again, and that actually undermines economic growth.

Despite evidence showing the overall benefits of public health measures, there are different impacts on people and industries. One of the great public policy challenges here is compensati­ng folks who take the hardest hits — lower-wage earners in general have had a much slower recovery versus higher-wage workers. cerb3 wasn’t perfect, but the government has done a good job of bridging income and adapting policy during the crisis. In terms of ensuring equitable treatment across companies, for example, the Manitoba government has fined Costco for selling nonessenti­al items while other businesses that sold nonessenti­al items were shuttered.

Even after mass vaccinatio­n, we could certainly be in a difficult economic position. But it’s possible that the vaccine rolling out will boost confidence enough on its own to have us off to the races in terms of economic growth.

rob gillezeau is an assistant professor of economics at the University of Victoria. He is a former chief economist in the office of the leader of the official opposition.

This interview has been edited from two conversati­ons for length and clarity.

 ??  ?? 1 From researcher­s at the Federal Reserve and mit (currently a preprint paper, which has not been peer reviewed)
2 From researcher­s at the National Bureau of Economic Research (currently a working paper, which has not been peer reviewed)
3 The Canada Emergency Response Benefit allocated $500 per week to people who had lost work because of covid-19 and who met other requiremen­ts.
1 From researcher­s at the Federal Reserve and mit (currently a preprint paper, which has not been peer reviewed) 2 From researcher­s at the National Bureau of Economic Research (currently a working paper, which has not been peer reviewed) 3 The Canada Emergency Response Benefit allocated $500 per week to people who had lost work because of covid-19 and who met other requiremen­ts.

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