Abstract
AbstractIndia faced a unique situation during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic when millions of migrant workers, in different states had to be transported to their home states as workplaces shut down. The governments in respective states faced challenges of minimizing economic impact while ensuring that the risk of infection was also kept under control. This paper develops models based on various secondary data from governmental and relevant non-governmental sources, trying to minimize the economic impact while keeping the rate of infection low and determining whether the migrant workforce should be allowed to stay in their workplace state or allowed to return to their home state. We found that the number of days of lockdown had a significant impact on the results. Fewer days of lockdown resulted in workers remaining in their work state as the preferred outcome, while a higher number of days of lockdown implied that people traveled to their home state and remain there. The proportion of workers who were willing to return to their work state played an important role on the results too. Beyond the threshold percentages of migrant workers returning to their work state, it became optimal for the government to encourage the workers to travel to their home state. However, this was mostly visible for moderate number of lockdown days as the effects on results were dominated by the impact from the number of lockdown days for too high or too low number of lockdown days. There is also an important trade-off between the budget and infection rate ‘R’ for the governments to consider. Minimizing the risk of infection requires an additional budget.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Management Science and Operations Research,General Decision Sciences
Reference130 articles.
1. Acemoglu, D., Chernozhukov, V., Werning, I. & Whinston, M.D. (2020). Optimal targeted lockdowns in a multi-group sir model, NBER Working Paper 27102.
2. Agarwal, S., Kant, R. and Shankar, R. (2022). Humanitarian supply chain management: Modeling the pre and post-disaster relief operations. International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment, 13(4), pp. 421–439.
3. Altay, N., Gunasekaran, A., Dubey, R., & Childe, S. J. (2018). Agility and resilience as antecedents of supply chain performance under moderating effects of organizational culture within the humanitarian setting: a dynamic capability view. Production Planning & Control, 29(14), 1158–1174.
4. Alvarez, F. E., Argente, D., & Lippi, F. (2020). A simple planning problem for covid-19 lockdown. Technical report. National Bureau of Economic Research.
5. Anon. (n.d.), Nct of delhi - consumption of electricity per capita. Retrieved 22 Nov 2020 from https://knoema.com/atlas/India/NCT-of-Delhi/Consumption-of-electricity-per-capita.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献