The Individual Welfare Costs of Stay-At-Home Policies
(2020) In Working Papers- Abstract
- This paper reports the results of a choice experiment designed to estimate the private welfare costs of stay-at-home policies during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study is conducted on a large and representative sample of the Swedish population. The results suggest that the welfare cost of a one-month stay-at-home policy, restricting non-working hours away from home, amounts to 9.1 percent of Sweden's monthly GDP. The cost can be interpreted as 29,600 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), which roughly corresponds to between 3,700 and 8,000 COVID-19 fatalities. Moreover, we find that stricter and longer lockdowns are disproportionately more costly than more lenient ones. This result indicates that strict stay-at-home policies are likely to be... (More)
- This paper reports the results of a choice experiment designed to estimate the private welfare costs of stay-at-home policies during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study is conducted on a large and representative sample of the Swedish population. The results suggest that the welfare cost of a one-month stay-at-home policy, restricting non-working hours away from home, amounts to 9.1 percent of Sweden's monthly GDP. The cost can be interpreted as 29,600 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), which roughly corresponds to between 3,700 and 8,000 COVID-19 fatalities. Moreover, we find that stricter and longer lockdowns are disproportionately more costly than more lenient ones. This result indicates that strict stay-at-home policies are likely to be cost-effective only if they slow the spread of the disease much more than more lenient ones. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/f46848e2-b0b6-4d9b-a3f6-74bde5fc9634
- author
- Andersson, Ola ; Campos-Mercade, Pol ; Carlsson, Fredrik ; Schneider, Florian and Wengström, Erik LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2020-05-25
- type
- Working paper/Preprint
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Stay-at-home orders, welfare effects, choice experiment, D62, I18
- in
- Working Papers
- issue
- 2020:9
- pages
- 43 pages
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- f46848e2-b0b6-4d9b-a3f6-74bde5fc9634
- date added to LUP
- 2020-06-11 09:03:12
- date last changed
- 2025-04-04 15:12:24
@misc{f46848e2-b0b6-4d9b-a3f6-74bde5fc9634, abstract = {{This paper reports the results of a choice experiment designed to estimate the private welfare costs of stay-at-home policies during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study is conducted on a large and representative sample of the Swedish population. The results suggest that the welfare cost of a one-month stay-at-home policy, restricting non-working hours away from home, amounts to 9.1 percent of Sweden's monthly GDP. The cost can be interpreted as 29,600 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), which roughly corresponds to between 3,700 and 8,000 COVID-19 fatalities. Moreover, we find that stricter and longer lockdowns are disproportionately more costly than more lenient ones. This result indicates that strict stay-at-home policies are likely to be cost-effective only if they slow the spread of the disease much more than more lenient ones.}}, author = {{Andersson, Ola and Campos-Mercade, Pol and Carlsson, Fredrik and Schneider, Florian and Wengström, Erik}}, keywords = {{Stay-at-home orders; welfare effects; choice experiment; D62; I18}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{05}}, note = {{Working Paper}}, number = {{2020:9}}, series = {{Working Papers}}, title = {{The Individual Welfare Costs of Stay-At-Home Policies}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/194581696/WP20_9.pdf}}, year = {{2020}}, }