Alexander W. Peters (
Rachel R. Yorlets is a PhD student in epidemiology at the Brown University School of Public Health and a predoctoral fellow at the Population Studies and Training Center at Brown University, in Providence, Rhode Island.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2020 Nov;39(11):1961-1969. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2019.01701.
We modeled gross domestic product (GDP) losses attributable to firearm-related fatalities in each of thirty-six Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries using the value-of-lost-output approach from 2018 to 2030. There are three categories of firearm-related fatalities: physical violence, self-harm, and unintentional injury. We project that the thirty-six OECD countries will lose $239.0 billion in cumulative GDP from 2018 to 2030 from firearm-related fatalities. Most of these losses ($152.5 billion) will occur as a result of fatalities in the US. In 2030 alone, the OECD countries will collectively lose $30.4 billion (0.04 percent) of their estimated annual GDP from firearm-related fatalities. The highest relative losses will occur in Mexico and the US; the lowest will occur in Japan. Firearm-related fatalities are expected to disproportionately affect the US and Mexican economies. Across the OECD, 48.5 percent of economic losses will be attributable to physical violence, 47.0 percent to self-harm, and 4.6 percent to unintentional injury. These findings provide a more complete picture of the toll of firearm-related fatalities, a global public health crisis that, without intervention, will continue to impose significant economic losses across OECD countries.
我们采用产出损失法,对经济合作与发展组织(OECD)36 个国家 2018 年至 2030 年期间与枪支相关的死亡事件所导致的国内生产总值(GDP)损失进行了建模。与枪支相关的死亡事件分为三类:身体暴力、自残和意外伤害。我们预计,2018 年至 2030 年,36 个 OECD 国家因与枪支相关的死亡事件累计损失 2390 亿美元的 GDP。其中大部分损失(1525 亿美元)将来自美国的死亡事件。仅在 2030 年,OECD 国家每年 GDP 的 0.04%(304 亿美元)就将因与枪支相关的死亡事件而损失。墨西哥和美国的相对损失最高;日本的相对损失最低。与枪支相关的死亡事件预计将对美国和墨西哥经济造成不成比例的影响。在整个 OECD 地区,48.5%的经济损失归因于身体暴力,47.0%归因于自残,4.6%归因于意外伤害。这些发现更全面地描述了与枪支相关的死亡事件造成的损失,这是一场全球公共卫生危机,如果不加以干预,将继续在 OECD 国家造成重大的经济损失。