Authors
Luiz Brotherhood, Philipp Kircher, Cezar Santos, Michèle Tertilt
- Acknowledgements & Disclosure
- All funding sources are named in the acknowledgements of the paper. In particular: Financial support from the German Research Foundation (through CRC-TR-224 (project A3) and the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz-Prize), the European Research Council (through ERC grant 818859), the Spanish Government (PID2021-126549NB-I00 and PID2020-114040RB-I00), and the Generalitat of Catalonia (AGAUR-2020PANDE00036 and 2021-SGR-00862) is gratefully acknowledged. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.3386/w32558
- Published in
- United States of America
Table of Contents
- Introduction 3
- Literature Review 5
- Model 8
- Calibration and Model Fit 16
- Calibration 16
- Non-targeted Moments: Mortality and Behavior over Time 21
- The Importance of Behavioral Changes 24
- Optimal Lockdown 27
- Optimal Policy for Other Pandemics 31
- Spanish Flu Compared to Covid 31
- Covid in Developing Countries 37
- Future Pandemics 38
- Summary of Lessons Learned 43
- The Importance of Testing 43
- Conclusions 47
- Laws of Motion and Aggregation 54
- Extra Tables and Figures 58
- Calibration: Spanish Flu 70
- Computational Appendix 72
- A model with two-period uncertainty 74
- Value Functions in the model with two periods of uncertainty 74
- Susceptible 74
- Infected 74
- f1 fever people 75
- f2 fever people in period t: 76
- nf2 no fever people in period t: 78
- Type Distributions in the model with two periods of uncertainty 78
- Aggregation in the model with two periods of uncertainty 82