Author(s)
Christian Alemán
Christopher Busch
Alexander Ludwig
Raül Santaeulàlia-Llopis

We develop a novel empirical approach to identify the effectiveness of policies against a pandemic. The essence of our approach is the insight that epidemic dynamics are best tracked over stages, rather than over time. We use a normalization procedure that makes the pre-policy paths of the epidemic identical across regions. The procedure uncovers regional variation in the stage of the epidemic at the time of policy implementation. This variation delivers clean identification of the policy effect based on the epidemic path of a leading region that serves as a counterfactual for other regions. We apply our method to evaluate the effectiveness of the nationwide stay-home policy enacted in Spain against the Covid-19 pandemic. We find that the policy saved 15.9% of lives relative to the number of deaths that would have occurred had it not been for the policy intervention. Its effectiveness evolves with the epidemic and is larger when implemented at earlier stages.

Publication Type
Working Paper
File Description
First version, October 16, 2020
JEL Codes
E01: Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics, General Aggregative Models
E22: Investment; Capital; Intangible Capital; Capacity
E25: Aggregate Factor Income Distribution
Keywords
macroeconomics
pandemic
stages
COVID-19
stay-home
policy effects
identification