Summerfield Fraser, Di Matteo Livio
Department of Economics, St Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, NS B2G 2W5 Canada.
Department of Economics, Lakehead University, 955 Oliver Road, Thunder Bay, ON P7B5E1 Canada.
Cliometrica (Berl). 2023 May 29:1-47. doi: 10.1007/s11698-023-00269-w.
This paper documents the short-run macroeconomic impacts of influenza pandemics across 16 countries spanning 1871-2016 using the Jordà-Schularick-Taylor Macrohistory Database and the Human Mortality Database. We find pandemic-induced mortality contributed meaningfully to business cycle fluctuations in the post 1870 era. We identify negative causal impacts on the cyclical component of GDP using pandemics to instrument for working-age mortality. The analysis of short-run economic outcomes extends literature dominated by long-run economic growth outcomes and case studies of several specific health shocks such as the Black Death, Spanish Flu or COVID-19. Our findings illustrate that less catastrophic pandemics still have important economic implications.
本文利用乔达-舒拉里克-泰勒宏观历史数据库和人类死亡率数据库,记录了1871年至2016年间16个国家流感大流行的短期宏观经济影响。我们发现,大流行导致的死亡率对1870年后时代的商业周期波动有重大贡献。我们使用大流行作为工作年龄人口死亡率的工具变量,确定了对GDP周期性成分的负面因果影响。对短期经济结果的分析扩展了以长期经济增长结果以及诸如黑死病、西班牙流感或新冠疫情等几种特定健康冲击的案例研究为主导的文献。我们的研究结果表明,危害较小的大流行仍然具有重要的经济影响。