(University of Turin, IZA, GLO, and CHILD), Italy.
(San Diego State University, Family Inequality Network at University of Chicago, IZA, CESifo, and GLO), United States.
Econ Hum Biol. 2020 Dec;39:100934. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2020.100934. Epub 2020 Oct 29.
We study how patterns of intergenerational residence possibly influence fatalities from Covid-19. We use aggregate data on Covid-19 deaths, the share of young adults living with their parents, and a number of other statistics, for 29 European countries associated with the European Union and all US states. Controlling for population size, we find that more people died from Covid in countries or states with higher rates of intergenerational co-residence. This positive correlation persists even when controlling for date of first death, presence of lockdown, Covid tests per capita, hospital beds per capita, proportion of elderly, GDP per capita, government's political orientation, percentage urban, and rental prices. The positive association between co-residence and fatalities is led by the US.
我们研究代际居住模式如何可能影响新冠病毒死亡人数。我们使用了来自 29 个欧洲国家和美国各州的新冠病毒死亡人数、年轻人与父母同住的比例以及其他一些统计数据的汇总数据。在控制人口规模的情况下,我们发现代际共居率较高的国家或州的新冠病毒死亡人数更多。即使在控制首次死亡日期、封锁措施、人均新冠检测、人均病床数、老年人比例、人均 GDP、政府政治倾向、城市人口比例和租金价格等因素后,这种正相关关系仍然存在。共居与死亡率之间的正相关关系主要是由美国引领的。