The Social Divide of Social Distancing: Shelter-in-Place Behavior in Santiago During the Covid-19 Pandemic

被引:17
作者
Carranza, Aldo [1 ]
Goic, Marcel [2 ,3 ]
Lara, Eduardo [2 ,3 ]
Olivares, Marcelo [2 ,3 ]
Weintraub, Gabriel Y. [4 ]
Covarrubia, Julio [5 ]
Escobedo, Cristian [5 ,6 ]
Jara, Natalia [5 ]
Basso, Leonardo J. [3 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] Univ Chile, Ingn Ind, Santiago, Chile
[3] Univ Chile, Inst Sistemas Complejos Ingn, Santiago, Chile
[4] Stanford Univ, Stanford Grad Sch Business, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[5] Empresa Nacl Telecomunicac, Digital Entel Ocean, Santiago, Chile
[6] Univ Chile, Fac Arquitectura & Urbanismo, Santiago, Chile
[7] Univ Chile, Ingn Civil, Santiago, Chile
关键词
lockdowns; shelter in place; mobility; COVID-19; socioeconomic heterogeneity; panel data analysis; SEGREGATION;
D O I
10.1287/mnsc.2021.4240
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Voluntary shelter-in-place directives and lockdowns are the main nonpharmaceutical interventions that governments around the globe have used to contain the Covid-19 pandemic. In this paper, we study the impact of such interventions in the capital of a developing country, Santiago, Chile, that exhibits large socioeconomic inequality. A distinctive feature of our study is that we use granular geolocated mobile phone data to construct mobility measures that capture (1) shelter-in-place behavior and (2) trips within the city to destinations with potentially different risk profiles. Using panel data linear regression models, we first show that the impact of social distancing measures and lockdowns on mobility is highly heterogeneous and dependent on socioeconomic levels. More specifically, our estimates indicate that, although zones of high socioeconomic levels can exhibit reductions in mobility of around 50%-90% depending on the specific mobility metric used, these reductions are only 20%-50% for lower income communities. The large reductions in higher income communities are significantly driven by voluntary shelter-in-place behavior. Second, also using panel data methods, we show that our mobility measures are important predictors of infections: roughly, a 10% increase in mobility correlates with a 5% increase in the rate of infection. Our results suggest that mobility is an important factor explaining differences in infection rates between high-and low-incomes areas within the city. Further, they confirm the challenges of reducing mobility in lower income communities, where people generate their income from their daily work. To be effective, shelter-in-place restrictions in municipalities of low socioeconomic levels may need to be complemented by other supporting measures that enable their inhabitants to increase compliance.
引用
收藏
页码:2016 / 2027
页数:13
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