Authors
Borja Gambau, Juan C Palomino, Juan G Rodríguez, Raquel Sebastian
Publication date
2022/5/28
Journal
Applied Economics
Volume
54
Issue
25
Pages
2900-2915
Publisher
Routledge
Description
We study economic vulnerability to the stay-at-home orders and social distancing measures imposed to prevent COVID-19 contagion in the US by education, race, gender, and state. Under 2 months of lockdown plus 10 months of partial functioning we find that, without compensating policies, wage inequality and poverty would increase in the US for all social groups and states. We estimate a national potential increase in inequality of 4.1 Gini points and of 9.7 percentage points for poverty, with uneven increases by race, gender, and education. The restrictions imposed to curb the pandemic produce a double process of divergence: both inequality within and between social groups increase, with education accounting for the largest part of the rise in inequality between groups. Education level differences also impact wage poverty risk more than differences by race or gender, making the low-educated the most …
Total citations
2022202320245165
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