The Short-Term Impacts of COVID-19 on Households in Developing Countries: An Overview Based on aHarmonized Data Set of High-Frequency Surveys
Tom Bundervoet,
Maria Eugenia Davalos and
Natalia Garcia
No 9582, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank
Abstract:
This paper combines new data from high-frequency surveys with data on the stringency ofcontainment measures to examine the short-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on households in developing countries.This paper is one of the first to document the impacts of COVID-19 on households across a large number of developingcountries and to do so for a comparable time-period, corresponding to the peak of the pandemic-induced drop inhuman mobility, and the first to systematically analyze the cross- and within-country effects on employment, income,food security, and learning. Using representative data from 34 countries, accounting for a combined population of almost1.4 billion, the findings show that in the average country, 36 percent of respondents stopped working in the immediateaftermath of the pandemic, over 64 percent of households reported decreases in income, and over 30 percent ofchildren were unable to continue learning during school closures. Pandemic-induced loss of jobs and incometranslated into heightened food insecurity at the household level. The more stringent the virus containment measureswere, the higher was the likelihood of loss of jobs and income. The pandemic’s effects were widespread and highlyregressive, disproportionally affecting vulnerable segments of the population. Women, youth, and lower-educatedworkers—groups disadvantaged in the labor market before the COVID-19 shock—were significantly more likely to lose theirjobs and experience decreased incomes. Self-employed and casual workers—the most vulnerable workers in developingcountries—bore the brunt of the pandemic-induced income losses. Interruptions in learning were most salient forchildren in lower-income countries, and within countries for children in lower-income households with lower-educatedparents and in rural areas. The unequal impacts of the pandemic across socioeconomic groups risk cementinginequality of opportunity and undermining social mobility and call for policies to foster an inclusive recovery andstrengthen resilience to future shocks.
Keywords: Nutrition; Food Security; Labor Markets; Educational Sciences; Rural Labor Markets (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021-03-15
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)
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Journal Article: The short-term impacts of COVID-19 on households in developing countries: An overview based on a harmonized dataset of high-frequency surveys (2022) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:9582
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