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Erschienen in: The European Journal of Health Economics 6/2010

01.12.2010 | Original Paper

The macroeconomic impact of pandemic influenza: estimates from models of the United Kingdom, France, Belgium and The Netherlands

verfasst von: Marcus Richard Keogh-Brown, Richard D. Smith, John W. Edmunds, Philippe Beutels

Erschienen in: The European Journal of Health Economics | Ausgabe 6/2010

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Abstract

The 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) showed that infectious disease outbreaks can have notable macroeconomic impacts. The current H1N1 and potential H5N1 flu pandemics could have a much greater impact. Using a multi-sector single country computable general equilibrium model of the United Kingdom, France, Belgium and The Netherlands, together with disease scenarios of varying severity, we examine the potential economic cost of a modern pandemic. Policies of school closure, vaccination and antivirals, together with prophylactic absence from work are evaluated and their cost impacts are estimated. Results suggest GDP losses from the disease of approximately 0.5–2% but school closure and prophylactic absenteeism more than triples these effects. Increasing school closures from 4 weeks at the peak to entire pandemic closure almost doubles the economic cost, but antivirals and vaccinations seem worthwhile. Careful planning is therefore important to ensure expensive policies to mitigate the pandemic are effective in minimising illness and deaths.
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Fußnoten
1
A CET function determines how the domestically produced commodity is allocated between the domestic market and exports. A constant value for this elasticity is set for each sector.
 
2
The Armington assumption determines the way in which the domestically produced commodity and imports are combined into a composite commodity by means of an elasticity of substitution. This elasticity is constant for each sector.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
The macroeconomic impact of pandemic influenza: estimates from models of the United Kingdom, France, Belgium and The Netherlands
verfasst von
Marcus Richard Keogh-Brown
Richard D. Smith
John W. Edmunds
Philippe Beutels
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2010
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
The European Journal of Health Economics / Ausgabe 6/2010
Print ISSN: 1618-7598
Elektronische ISSN: 1618-7601
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10198-009-0210-1

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