Naudé Wim, Nagler Paula
Department of Economics, University College Cork, Ireland.
RWTH Aachen University, Germany.
Cities. 2022 Dec;131:103909. doi: 10.1016/j.cities.2022.103909. Epub 2022 Aug 8.
In this paper we derive a theoretical model of the spread of a viral infection which we use as basis for an estimation strategy to test four interrelated hypotheses on the relationship between country-level COVID-19 mortality rates and the extent of urban development. Using data covering 81 countries we find evidence that countries with a higher population density, a higher share of the urban population living in the largest city, and countries with a higher urbanization rate had on average the same or fewer COVID-19 fatalities compared to less urbanized countries in 2020. Even though COVID-19 spreads faster in cities, fatalities may be lower, conditional on economic development, trust in government, and a well-functioning health care system. Generally, urbanization and city development are associated with economic development: with the resources urbanized countries have, it is easier for them to manage and maintain stricter lockdowns, and to roll out effective pharmaceutical interventions.
在本文中,我们推导了一个病毒感染传播的理论模型,并以此为基础制定了一种估计策略,以检验关于国家层面新冠疫情死亡率与城市发展程度之间关系的四个相互关联的假设。利用涵盖81个国家的数据,我们发现有证据表明,与城市化程度较低的国家相比,2020年人口密度较高、居住在最大城市的城市人口比例较高的国家,以及城市化率较高的国家,新冠疫情死亡人数平均相同或更少。尽管新冠病毒在城市中传播得更快,但在经济发展、对政府的信任以及运转良好的医疗体系的条件下,死亡人数可能会更低。一般来说,城市化和城市发展与经济发展相关:城市化国家拥有资源,因此更容易管理和维持更严格的封锁措施,并推出有效的药物干预措施。