Literaturdatenbank

COVID-19 and the city: Did urbanized countries suffer more fatalities?
Beschreibung
In this paper we derive a theoretical model of the spread of a viral infection which we use as basis for an estimation strategy to test four interrelated hypotheses on the relationship between country-level COVID-19 mortality rates and the extent of urban development. Using data covering 81 countries we find evidence that countries with a higher population density, a higher share of the urban population living in the largest city, and countries with a higher urbanization rate had on average the same or fewer COVID-19 fatalities compared to less urbanized countries in 2020. Even though COVID-19 spreads faster in cities, fatalities may be lower, conditional on economic development, trust in government, and a well-functioning health care system. Generally, urbanization and city development are associated with economic development: with the resources urbanized countries have, it is easier for them to manage and maintain stricter lockdowns, and to roll out effective pharmaceutical interventions.
Erschienen
2022
Themen
Krisenvorbereitung & Prävention
Krisenbewältigung
Daseinsvorsorge
Autor*innen
Naudé, Wim
Nagler, Paula
Zeitschrift
Cities
Band
131
DOI
10.1016/j.cities.2022.103909