The welfare implications of COVID‐19 for fragile and conflict‐affected regions

Author:

Tabakis Chrysostomos1,Ten Gi Khan2ORCID,Newhouse David3,Pape Utz3,Weber Michael3

Affiliation:

1. KDI School of Public Policy and Management Sejong‐si Republic of Korea

2. College of Social Sciences Keimyung University Daegu Republic of Korea

3. The World Bank Washington DC USA

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the ramifications of the COVID‐19 pandemic for households' welfare in regions subject to fragility, conflict, and violence (FCV) is important to inform programs and policies in this context. Harmonized data from high‐frequency phone surveys indicates that, at the onset of the pandemic, a higher fraction of respondents in FCV regions relative to non‐FCV ones faced adverse household income changes and reported to have stopped working since the outbreak of the crisis. On top of that, households in FCV regions were far less likely to have received government assistance than those in non‐FCV regions. These findings suggest that, at the start of the COVID‐19 pandemic, there was a widening of the preexisting economic gap between FCV and non‐FCV regions, raising the recovery bar for the former.

Funder

Kansas Turfgrass Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Development,Geography, Planning and Development

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