Economic Diversity and the Propagation of COVID-19: How Vulnerable is Your City?

Jericho McLeod, E. Lopez
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Abstract

The heterogeneity of social and economic systems in known to play an important role in the propagation of contagious pathogens such as the SARS-CoV-2 virus. This heterogeneity, usually attached directly to individuals can also be found systemically in age groups, income brackets, and other important population characteristics. In this article, we identify a set of heterogeneous factors, associated not with individuals but with geographic units that include metropolitan and larger conurbations, that correlate with worse outcomes with respect to the COVID-19 pandemic. A key predictive factor is a lack economic diversity reflected in narrower occupational and industrial compositions. Although the exact mechanism by which these factors induce worse outcomes regarding the control of COVID-19 is not clear, one candidate explanation emerges in the stubbornness of work mobility, where units with lower economic diversity have populations that continue to go to work more than higher diversity units. The effect we identify is, in practice, as strong as many typically accepted drivers of disease propagation such as population.
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经济多样性与COVID-19的传播:你的城市有多脆弱?
众所周知,社会和经济制度的异质性在传染性病原体(如SARS-CoV-2病毒)的传播中发挥了重要作用。这种通常与个人直接相关的异质性,也可以在年龄组、收入阶层和其他重要的人口特征中系统地发现。在本文中,我们确定了一组异质性因素,这些因素与COVID-19大流行的较差结果相关,而不是与个人相关,而是与地理单位(包括大都市和更大的城市群)相关。一个关键的预测因素是缺乏经济多样性,反映在较窄的职业和工业构成上。虽然这些因素在控制COVID-19方面导致更糟糕结果的确切机制尚不清楚,但一种可能的解释是工作流动性的顽固性,在经济多样性较低的单位,人口继续比多样性较高的单位更多地去上班。在实践中,我们发现的影响与许多通常被接受的疾病传播驱动因素(如人口)一样强大。
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