Title
Internal and External Effects of Social Distancing in a Pandemic
Author(s)
Maryam Farboodi Maryam Farboodi (MIT)
Gregor Jarosch Gregor Jarosch (Princeton University)
Robert Shimer Robert Shimer (University of Chicago)
Abstract
We develop a quantitative framework for exploring how individuals trade off the utility benefit of social activity against the internal and external health risks that come with social interactions during a pandemic. We calibrate the model to external targets and then compare its predictions with daily data on social activity, fatalities, and the estimated effective reproduction number R(t) from the COVID-19 pandemic in March-June 2020. While the laissez- faire equilibrium is consistent with much of the decline in social activity that we observed in US data, optimal policy further imposes immediate and highly persistent social distancing. Notably, neither equilibrium nor optimal social distancing is extremely restrictive, in the sense that the effective reproduction number never falls far below 1. The expected cost of COVID-19 in the US is substantial, $12,700 in the laissez-faire equilibrium and $8,100 per person under an optimal policy. Optimal policy generates this large welfare gain by shifting the composition of costs from fatalities to persistent social distancing.
Creation Date
2021-03
Section URL ID
Paper Number
2021-78
URL
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1aMgBTIWdfGawmtUgiIJNTk9PyIbeiKtT/view
File Function
Jel
D11, D81, I12, I18
Keyword(s)
COVID-19, social activity, reproduction number, economic epidemiology, optimal control, externalities
Suppress
false
Series
13