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Cities in a pandemic: Evidence from China

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-12-19, 14:33 authored by Badi H Baltagi, Ying Deng, Jing Li, Zhenlin Yang
This paper studies the impact of urban density, city government efficiency, and medical resources on COVID-19 infection and death outcomes in China. We adopt a simultaneous spatial dynamic panel data model to account for (i) the simultaneity of infection and death outcomes, (ii) the spatial pattern of the transmission, (iii) the intertemporal dynamics of the disease, and (iv) the unobserved city-specific and time-specific effects. We find that, while population density increases the level of infections, government efficiency significantly mitigates the negative impact of urban density. We also find that the availability of medical resources improves public health outcomes conditional on lagged infections. Moreover, there exists significant heterogeneity at different phases of the epidemiological cycle.

Funding

Lee Kong Chian Fellowship

History

Author affiliation

School of Business, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Regional Science

Publisher

WILEY

issn

0022-4146

eissn

1467-9787

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2024-10-11

Language

English