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    Description
    Scientific peer-reviewed publication
    Author
    Description/abstract

    Various non-pharmaceutical interventions were adopted by countries worldwide in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic with adverse socioeconomic side effects, which raises the question about their differential effectiveness. We estimate the average dynamic effect of each intervention on the incidence of COVID-19 and on people’s whereabouts by developing a statistical model that accounts for the contemporaneous adoption of multiple interventions. Using daily data from 175 countries, we show that, even after controlling for other concurrent lockdown policies, cancelling public events, imposing restrictions on private gatherings and closing schools and workplaces had significant effects on reducing COVID-19 infections. Restrictions on internal movement and public transport had no effects because the aforementioned policies, imposed earlier on average, had already de facto reduced human mobility. International travel restrictions, although imposed early, had a short-lived effect failing to prevent the epidemic from turning into a pandemic because they were less stringent. We interpret the impact of each intervention on containing the pandemic using a conceptual framework which relies on their effects on human mobility behaviors in a manner consistent with time-use and epidemiological factors.

    Publication Language
    English
    Free Keywords
    Policy measures
    Topics
    Health status » Morbidity/disability » Communicable diseases » Covid-19;
    Policy » Adherence/ compliance to measure
    ISSN Number
    2045-2322
    Access rights to the publication
    Closed access
    Country:
    Policy measure
    Surveillance
    Measures
    Journal
    Scientific Reports
    Publisher
    Springer Science and Business Media LLC
    Year of Publication
    2021
    Volume
    11
    Issue
    1
    Corresponding author
    Nikolaos Askitas
    Contact e-mail
    askitas@iza.org
    Contact info (address)

    IDSC - Research Data Center, IZA - Institute of Labor Economics, Bonn, 53113, Germany