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Michele Belot

Michele Belot

· Frances Perkins Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations and Economics

Cornell University · Industrial and Labor Relations

h-index
Citations4.5k
Papers46 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Demographic economics
  • Economics
  • Development economics
  • Psychology
  • Medicine
  • Business
  • Environmental health
  • Social psychology
  • Socioeconomics
  • Geography
  • Economic growth

Selected publications

  • Socio-demographic factors associated with self-protecting behavior during the Covid-19 pandemic

    Journal of Population Economics · 2021 · 352 citations

    • Demographic economics
    • Psychology
    • Environmental health

    Given the role of human behavior in the spread of disease, it is vital to understand what drives people to engage in or refrain from health-related behaviors during a pandemic. This paper examines factors associated with the adoption of self-protective health behaviors, such as social distancing and mask wearing, at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in the USA. These behaviors not only reduce an individual's own risk of infection but also limit the spread of disease to others. Despite these dual benefits, universal adoption of these behaviors is not assured. We focus on the role of socioeconomic differences in explaining behavior, relying on data collected in April 2020 during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. The data include information on income, gender and race along with unique variables relevant to the current pandemic, such as work arrangements and housing quality. We find that higher income is associated with larger changes in self-protective behaviors. These gradients are partially explained by the fact that people with less income are more likely to report circumstances that make adopting self-protective behaviors more difficult, such as an inability to tele-work. Both in the USA and elsewhere, policies that assume universal compliance with self-protective measures-or that otherwise do not account for socioeconomic differences in the costs of doing so-are unlikely to be effective or sustainable.

  • Unequal consequences of Covid 19: representative evidence from six countries

    Review of Economics of the Household · 2021 · 123 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Demographic economics
    • Economics
    • Development economics

    Covid-19 and the measures taken to contain it have led to unprecedented constraints on work and leisure activities, across the world. This paper uses nationally representative surveys to document how people of different ages and incomes have been affected in the early phase of the pandemic. The data was collected in six countries (China, South Korea, Japan, Italy, UK, and US) in the third week of April 2020. First, we document changes in job circumstances and social activities. Second, we document self-reported negative and positive consequences of the crisis on well-being. We find that young people have experienced more drastic changes to their life and have been most affected economically and psychologically. There is less of a systematic pattern across income groups. While lower income groups have been more affected economically, higher income groups have experienced more changes in their social life and spending. A large fraction of people of low and high income groups report negative effects on well-being.

Frequent coauthors

  • Jonathan James

    Catholic Charities

    56 shared
  • Jeroen van de Ven

    Tinbergen Institute

    40 shared
  • Philipp Kircher

    36 shared
  • Julian Jamison

    University of Exeter

    33 shared
  • Valeria Skafida

    University of Edinburgh

    26 shared
  • Noémi Berlin

    EconomiX

    26 shared
  • Egon Tripodi

    23 shared
  • Paul J. Müller

    20 shared

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