Li Teng, Barwick Panle Jia, Deng Yongheng, Huang Xinfei, Li Shanjun
International School of Business and Finance and Institute of Advanced Finance, Sun Yat-sen University, China.
University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States.
J Urban Econ. 2023 May;135:103543. doi: 10.1016/j.jue.2023.103543. Epub 2023 Mar 7.
Based on mobile phone records for 71 million users and location tracking information for one million users over almost three years, this study examines the labor market impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in China's Guangdong province, whose GDP is larger than that of all but the top 12 countries in the world. Using a standard difference-in-differences framework, our analysis shows dramatic and protracted effects of the pandemic on the labor market: it increased unemployment by 72% and unemployment benefits claims by 57% even after the full reopening in 2020 relative to their levels in the same period in 2019. The impact was also highly heterogeneous, with women, workers older than 40, and migrants being more affected. Cities that rely more on export or that have a higher share of the hospitality industry in GDP but a lower share of the finance and healthcare industries experienced a more pronounced increase in unemployment. The lingering impact likely reflects the global transmission of the pandemic's effects through the supply chain and trade channels.
基于近三年来7100万用户的手机记录和100万用户的位置跟踪信息,本研究考察了新冠疫情对中国广东省劳动力市场的影响。广东省的国内生产总值(GDP)仅次于全球排名前12的国家。我们采用标准的双重差分框架进行分析,结果显示疫情对劳动力市场产生了巨大且持久的影响:即使在2020年全面重新开放之后,相对于2019年同期水平,失业率仍上升了72%,失业救济金申请量增加了57%。这种影响也具有高度的异质性,女性、40岁以上的工人和外来务工人员受到的影响更大。在GDP中出口依赖度更高或 hospitality 行业占比更高但金融和医疗行业占比更低的城市,失业率上升更为显著。这种持续的影响可能反映了疫情影响通过供应链和贸易渠道在全球范围内的传导。 (注:原文中“hospitality industry”直译为“酒店服务业”,这里为保留原文语境未做意译调整)