Long-run belief-scarring effects of COVID-19 in a global economy
Journal
Economic Theory
Series/Report No.
Economic Theory
Journal Volume
78
End Page
752
ISSN
0938-2259
1432-0479
Date Issued
2024-01
Author(s)
DOI
10.1007/s00199-023-01545-6
Abstract
While COVID-19 lockdown measures disrupt production worldwide, they also shock workers’ perceptions and beliefs about the economy and may hence have long-lasting effects after the pandemic. We study a belief-scarring mechanism in the context of labor markets and embed this mechanism into a multi-country, multi-sector Ricardian trade model with input–output linkages. Our quantitative analysis indicates that pandemic shocks leave persistent and substantial belief-driven negative impacts on the post-COVID economy. We find that international trade (without sectoral input–output linkages) worsens the post-COVID economic losses due to a labor-misallocation effect when workers misconceive comparative advantages, whereas input–output linkages dampen such losses. When allowing both trade and input–output linkages, a third and negative effect emerges because the presence of the global supply chain amplifies the stake of efficient allocation according to true comparative advantages and hence makes information friction even more costly. Thus, trade, with input–output linkages, exacerbates the post-COVID losses for the globe as a whole.
Subjects
Bayesian learning
Belief-scarring effect
International trade
COVID-19
Labor misallocation
Pandemic
Sectoral input–output linkages
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Type
journal article