Grimes Arthur
School of Government Victoria University of Wellington.
Motu Economic and Public Policy Research.
Rev Income Wealth. 2022 Jun;68(2):409-427. doi: 10.1111/roiw.12585. Epub 2022 Apr 22.
With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, New Zealand's official statistical agency (Stats NZ) moved quickly to supplement the quarterly Household Labour Force Survey with wellbeing measures from the General Social Survey. The first supplement (June 2020) began toward the end of a restrictive national lockdown. Subsequent quarterly surveys continued through a second lockdown for the Auckland region, enabling tests of regional lockdown impacts. Survey measures include questions on life satisfaction, health, income adequacy, social capital (trust), and loneliness. Published aggregated data indicate that life satisfaction, social capital, health, and financial wellbeing were each higher through the pandemic (in 2020) than prior to it, including for disadvantaged groups, but loneliness rose. Analysis of the individual-level data, confined to the within-pandemic period, however indicates that more restrictive lockdowns were associated both with reduced life satisfaction and greater loneliness, with differing impacts according to labor market and household status.
随着新冠疫情的爆发,新西兰官方统计机构(新西兰统计局)迅速采取行动,利用综合社会调查中的福祉指标对季度家庭劳动力调查进行补充。首次补充调查(2020年6月)在全国严格封锁接近尾声时开始。随后的季度调查在奥克兰地区的第二轮封锁期间持续进行,从而能够对地区封锁的影响进行测试。调查指标包括有关生活满意度、健康、收入充足性、社会资本(信任)和孤独感的问题。已公布的汇总数据表明,在整个疫情期间(2020年),生活满意度、社会资本、健康和财务福祉均高于疫情之前,包括弱势群体,但孤独感有所上升。然而,仅针对疫情期间的个人层面数据分析表明,更严格的封锁既与生活满意度下降有关,也与孤独感增强有关,且根据劳动力市场和家庭状况的不同而产生不同影响。