Simulations of Policy Responses and Interventions to Promote Inclusive Adaptation to and Recovery from the COVID-19 Crisis in Ecuador
report
posted on 2024-10-04, 13:48authored byCarla Canelas, Juan David Robalino
COVID-19 has had a devastating effect on the economy and the health of households around
the world. In this study, we evaluate the economic impact of COVID-19, as well as the effect of
government interventions aimed at alleviating it, on the welfare of Ecuadorian households in terms
of income shocks, poverty rates, and inequality. The empirical strategy used is to measure mean
income shock by gender and economic sector based on cross-sectional data from December
2019, May 2020, and September 2020, and use these estimates to simulate individual income
shocks from the December 2019 data. This allows us to disaggregate our analysis by demographic
and employment profile in order to identify groups at risk and help guide future government
COVID recovery programs. We find that by May 2019, poverty had more than doubled, reaching
57%, and average income had fallen by more than 50%. Informal workers, rural populations,
indigenous households, and households with young kids were among those most affected.
Government interventions thus far have had a negligible effect in the aggregate, but they may
have been crucial for the subsistence of households below the
poverty line.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Partnership for Economic Policy (PEP)
Citation
Canelas, C. and David Robalino, J. (2023) 'Simulations of Policy Responses and Interventions to Promote Inclusive Adaptation to and Recovery from the COVID-19 Crisis in Ecuador', PEP Working Paper 2022, Nairobi: Partnership for Economic Policy (PEP)-10