The Long-Term Impact of the COVID-19 Unemployment Shock on Life Expectancy and Mortality Rates
We adopt a time series approach to investigate the historical relation between unemployment, life expectancy, and mortality rates. We fit Vector-autoregressions for the overall US population and for groups identified based on gender and race. We use our results to assess the long-run effects of the COVID-19 economic recession on mortality and life expectancy. We estimate the size of the COVID-19-related unemployment shock to be between 2 and 5 times larger than the typical unemployment shock, depending on race and gender, resulting in a significant increase in mortality rates and drop in life expectancy. We also predict that the shock will disproportionately affect African-Americans and women, over a short horizon, while the effects for white men will unfold over longer horizons. These figures translate in more than 0.8 million additional deaths over the next 15 years.
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Copy CitationFrancesco Bianchi, Giada Bianchi, and Dongho Song, "The Long-Term Impact of the COVID-19 Unemployment Shock on Life Expectancy and Mortality Rates," NBER Working Paper 28304 (2020), https://doi.org/10.3386/w28304.
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Published Versions
Francesco Bianchi & Giada Bianchi & Dongho Song, 2022. "The Long-Term Impact of the COVID-19 Unemployment Shock on Life Expectancy and Mortality Rates," Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, . citation courtesy of