| Literature DB >> 31464014 |
Deliana Kostova1, Cynthia H Cassell1, John T Redd1, Desmond E Williams1, Tushar Singh1, Lise D Martel1, Rebecca E Bunnell1.
Abstract
Although the economic consequences of epidemic outbreaks to affected areas are often well documented, little is known about how these might carry over into the economies of unaffected regions. In the absence of direct pathogen transmission, global trade is one mechanism through which geographically distant epidemics could reverberate to unaffected countries. This study explores the link between global public health events and U.S. economic outcomes by evaluating the role of the 2014 West Africa Ebola outbreak in U.S. exports and exports-supported U.S. jobs, 2005-2016. Estimates were obtained using difference-in-differences models where sub-Saharan Africa countries were assigned to treatment and comparison groups based on their Ebola transmission status, with controls for observed and unobserved time-variant factors that may independently influence trends in trade. Multiple model specification checks were performed to ensure analytic robustness. The year of peak transmission, 2014, was estimated to result in $1.08 billion relative reduction in U.S. merchandise exports to Ebola-affected countries, whereas estimated losses in exports-supported U.S. jobs exceeded 1,200 in 2014 and 11,000 in 2015. These findings suggest that remote disruptions in health security might play a role in U.S. economic indicators, demonstrating the interconnectedness between global health and aspects of the global economy and informing the relevance of health security efforts. Published 2019. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA. Health Economics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.Entities:
Keywords: epidemics; global health; health security; trade
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31464014 PMCID: PMC6852535 DOI: 10.1002/hec.3938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ ISSN: 1057-9230 Impact factor: 3.046
Descriptive characteristics of treatment and comparison groups, annual country means
| 2005–2013 | 2014–2016 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristics | Treatment Group 1 | Treatment Group 2 | Comparison group | 46 SSA countries | Treatment Group 1 | Treatment Group 2 | Comparison group | 46 SSA countries |
| GDP per capita, constant 2016 USD | 850 | 2,075 | 3,948 | 3,619 | 639 | 1,678 | 2,967 | 2,731 |
| Value of U.S. merchandise exports, constant 2016 USD (millions) | 106 | 1,472 | 337 | 397 | 103 | 1,332 | 349 | 397 |
| Agriculture and livestock products (% of merchandise exports) | 2.2 | 22.6 | 3.7 | 7.9 | 4.5 | 13.6 | 2.9 | 5.2 |
| Oil, gas, minerals, and ores (% of merchandise exports) | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.5 | 0.5 | 2.2 | 0.9 | 1.6 | 1.5 |
| Manufacturing products (% of merchandise exports) | 83.3 | 71.9 | 87.0 | 83.7 | 78.9 | 74.7 | 91.6 | 87.7 |
| Other (% of merchandise exports) | 16.5 | 15.8 | 5.1 | 7.7 | 14.4 | 10.8 | 3.9 | 5.6 |
| Number of U.S. jobs supported by exports | 548 | 7,215 | 1,764 | 2,044 | 556 | 7,108 | 1,902 | 2,154 |
Note. Treatment Group 1 consists of three countries with epidemic transmission of 2014 Ebola: Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Treatment Group 2 consists of three countries with limited cases of 2014 Ebola: Mali, Nigeria, and Senegal. The comparison group consists of 40 sub‐Saharan Africa countries without cases of 2014 Ebola.
Abbreviations: GDP, gross domestic product; SSA, sub‐Saharan Africa.
Figure 1Aggregate U.S. merchandise exports, sub‐Saharan Africa countries, 2005–2016. Treatment Group 1 consists of three countries with epidemic transmission of 2014 Ebola: Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Treatment Group 2 consists of three countries with limited cases of 2014 Ebola: Mali, Nigeria, and Senegal. The comparison group consists of 40 sub‐Saharan Africa countries without cases of 2014 Ebola. Shaded area denotes 2014, the year of peak Ebola virus transmission.
Estimates from difference‐in‐differences models of U.S. merchandise exports to sub‐Saharan Africa countries
| Variables of interest | U.S. merchandise exports | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Agricultural and livestock | Oil, gas, minerals, and ores | Manufacturing | Other | U.S. jobs | |
| Treatment Group 1 | −242.12 | −52.41 | 0.47 (1.10) | −177.72 (110.61) | −12.50 (12.78) | −1480.02 |
| Treatment Group 2 | 533.78 (467.98) | 210.62 (164.59) | 1.89 (1.63) | 281.17 (259.39) | 40.41 (39.47) | 4092.17 (3376.03) |
| 2014 | 90.93 | 3.95 (4.29) | 3.27 | 80.78 | 3.10 (4.82) | 344.85 |
| Post2014 | 73.08 (52.85) | 25.71 (16.24) | 2.41 (1.65) | 21.56 (49.55) | 23.85 (15.20) | 224.86 (277.62) |
| Treatment Group 1 × 2014 | −90.38 | 3.24 (2.48) | −2.74 | −85.40 | −5.23 (4.80) | −414.49 |
| Treatment Group 1 × Post2014 | 49.05 (54.48) | 4.63 | 1.16 (3.24) | 40.38 (54.73) | 3.10 (13.59) | 5.25 (162.34) |
| Treatment Group 2 × 2014 | −269.50 | −149.33 (127.66) | 11.11 (9.15) | −5.34 (100.68) | −125.96 (110.04) | −1761.86 (1243.33) |
| Treatment Group 2 × Post2014 | −1447.67 (1142.19) | −282.42 (212.64) | 6.49 (4.28) | −854.50 (682.39) | −317.22 (256.49) | −3681.28 |
| U.S. currency value index | −9.28 | −1.18 | −0.07 (0.09) | −5.95 | −2.11*** (0.63) | −19.61 (15.55) |
| Partner country GDP per capita relative to U.S. | 1643.81 (1349.34) | 43.81 (50.16) | 4.01 (3.65) | 1573.99 (1287.51) | 23.21 (36.84) | 9829.41 (7681.30) |
| Partner country CPI relative to U.S. | −434.44 (290.88) | −128.19 | 2.31 (2.22) | −272.61 (206.99) | −35.57 (40.63) | −2612.28 |
|
| 546 | 546 | 546 | 546 | 546 | 500 |
Note. Treatment Group 1 consists of three countries with epidemic transmission of 2014 Ebola: Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Treatment Group 2 consists of three countries with limited cases of 2014 Ebola: Mali, Nigeria, and Senegal. The comparison group consists of 40 sub‐Saharan Africa countries without cases of 2014 Ebola. Estimates obtained from linear models with clustering by country and year. All models include controls for country‐specific time trends (not shown). Standard errors in parentheses. Models of U.S. exports are based on data for 2005–2016. Model of U.S. jobs is based on data for 2005–2015. U.S. exports in constant 2016 USD (millions).
Statistically significant at 10% level.
Statistically significant at 5% level.
Statistically significant at 1% level.
Abbreviations: CPI, consumer price index; GDP, gross domestic product.
Unadjusted and regression‐adjusted average annual differences in U.S. exports and U.S. exports‐supported jobs between 2005–2013 and 2014, by group
| Variables of interest | 2005–2013 | 2014 | Unadjusted difference (%) | Regression‐adjusted difference (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. exports (million constant 2016 USD) | ||||
| Treatment Group 1 | 105.7 | 103.4 | −2% | .5% |
| Treatment Group 2 | 1472.3 | 2067.2 | 40% | 12% |
| Comparison group | 337.3 | 456.7 | 35% | 27% |
| U.S. jobs (number) | ||||
| Treatment Group 1 | 548.3 | 520.0 | −5% | −13% |
| Treatment Group 2 | 7215.4 | 8052.3 | 12% | −20% |
| Comparison group | 1764.1 | 2141.8 | 21% | 20% |
Note. Treatment Group 1 consists of three countries with epidemic transmission of 2014 Ebola: Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Treatment Group 2 consists of three countries with limited cases of 2014 Ebola: Mali, Nigeria, and Senegal. The comparison group consists of 40 sub‐Saharan Africa countries without cases of 2014 Ebola.
Statistically significant at 10% level.
Statistically significant at 5% level.
Statistically significant at 1% level.
Summary of estimates from model of pre‐Ebola trends in U.S. exports, 2005–2013
| Variables of interest | Coefficient |
|---|---|
| Treatment Group 1 | −364.56 |
| Treatment Group 2 | 563.73 |
| Time trend | 36.53 (28.57) |
| Treatment Group 1 × Time Trend | 16.32 (23.17) |
| Treatment Group 2 × Time Trend | 143.34 (191.73) |
|
| 408 |
Note. Treatment Group 1 consists of three countries with epidemic transmission of 2014 Ebola: Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Treatment Group 2 consists of three countries with limited cases of 2014 Ebola: Mali, Nigeria, and Senegal. The comparison group consists of 40 sub‐Saharan Africa countries without cases of 2014 Ebola. Estimates obtained from linear models with clustering by country and year. All models include controls for country‐specific time trends, U.S. currency value index, partner country gross domestic product per capita relative to U.S., and partner country consumer price index relative to U.S. (not shown). U.S. exports in constant 2016 USD (millions). Standard errors in parentheses.
Statistically significant at 10% level.
Statistically significant at 5% level.
Statistically significant at 1% level.
Summary of estimates from robustness models
| Variables of interest | Main model | Sensitivity model: limit comparison countries to West Africa only | Sensitivity model: propensity score weighting of country groups | Falsification model: pseudotreatment groups | Placebo model: pseudooutbreak year | Permutation test: randomized treatment time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | |
| Treatment Group 1 × 2014 | −90.38 | −119.83 | −107.89 | −30.87 (0.46) | 45.53 (0.16) | −90.38 |
| Treatment Group 1 × Post‐2014 | 49.05 (0.37) | −8.99 (0.92) | 61.28 (0.38) | 144.66 | −48.03 (0.31) | 49.05 (0.52) |
| Treatment Group 2 × 2014 | −269.50 | −235.86 | −143.57 | −107.75 (0.18) | 574.55 (0.16) | −269.50 (0.74) |
| Treatment Group 2 × Post‐2014 | −1447.67 (0.20) | −1290.18 (0.28) | −168.82 (0.61) | −256.57 (0.12) | 343.88 (0.29) | −1447.67 |
|
| 546 | 204 | 546 | 474 | 546 | 546 |
Note. (1) Main model. Treatment Group 1 consists of three countries with epidemic transmission of 2014 Ebola: Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Treatment Group 2 consists of three countries with limited cases of 2014 Ebola: Mali, Nigeria, and Senegal. The comparison group consists of 40 sub‐Saharan Africa countries without Ebola cases. (2) Sensitivity model: Treatment groups are the same as in main model (1); comparison group is limited to 11 unaffected countries in the same SSA subregion as Ebola‐affected countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea‐Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mauritania, Niger, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Togo). (3) Sensitivity model: Treatment and comparison countries are the same as in main model (1); observations in each group are weighted using propensity scores. (4) Falsification model: Pseudotreatment Group 1 consists of three countries identified as being at high risk for 2014 Ebola transmission but experiencing no Ebola cases (Gambia, Guinea‐Bissau, and Ivory Coast). Pseudotreatment Group 2 consists of three countries in geographic proximity to Ebola‐affected countries but experiencing no Ebola cases (Benin, Burkina Faso, and Ghana). The comparison group consists of 34 remaining sub‐Saharan Africa countries without Ebola cases. (5) Placebo model: Treatment and comparison countries are same as in main model (1); pseudooutbreak year set to 2011. (6) Permutation test: Treatment and comparison countries are the same as in main model (1); outcome values are randomized within countries over multiple iterations without specifying a single pseudotreatment year. All estimates obtained from linear models with clustering by country and year. All models include controls for country‐specific time trends, U.S. currency value index, partner country gross domestic product per capita relative to U.S., and partner consumer price index relative to U.S. (not shown). U.S. exports in constant 2016 USD (millions). p values in parentheses.
Statistically significant at 10% level.
Statistically significant at 5% level.
Statistically significant at 1% level.