Social Distancing, Vaccination and Evolution of COVID-19 Transmission Rates in Europe

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Abstract

This paper provides estimates of COVID-19 transmission rates and explains their evolution for selected European countries since the start of the pandemic taking account of changes in voluntary and government mandated social distancing, incentives to comply, vaccination and the emergence of new variants. Evidence based on panel data modeling indicates that the diversity of outcomes that we document may have resulted from the nonlinear interaction of mandated and voluntary social distancing and the economic incentives that governments provided to support isolation. The importance of these factors declined over time, with vaccine uptake driving heterogeneity in country experiences in 2021. Our approach also allows us to identify the basic reproduction number, R, which is precisely estimated around 5, which is much larger than the values in the range of 2.4–3.9 assumed in the extant literature.

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Chudik, A., Pesaran, M. H., & Rebucci, A. (2023). Social Distancing, Vaccination and Evolution of COVID-19 Transmission Rates in Europe. IMF Economic Review, 71(2), 474–508. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41308-022-00181-9

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