COVID-19 Economic Response and Recovery: A Rapid Scoping Review

Author:

Mawani Farah N.12ORCID,Gunn Virginia13ORCID,O’Campo Patricia14,Anagnostou Michelle5ORCID,Muntaner Carles34ORCID,Wanigaratne Susitha6,Perri Melissa14,Ziegler Carolyn1,An Angie7

Affiliation:

1. Unity Health Toronto, Toronto, Canada

2. Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, York University, Toronto, Canada

3. Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, Canada

4. Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

5. Geography and Environmental Management, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada

6. The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada

7. Bronfman Business Library, York University, Toronto, Canada

Abstract

This rapid scoping review of existing evidence and research gaps addressed the following question: what research evidence exists and what are the research gaps at global, regional, and national levels on interventions to protect jobs, small- and medium-sized enterprises, and formal/informal sector workers in socioeconomic response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic? The results are based on 79 publications deemed eligible for inclusion after the screening and prioritizing of 1,658 records. The findings are organized according to the 3 main categories of socioeconomic interventions—protecting jobs, enterprises, and workers—although the 3 are intertwined. Most results were derived from global-level gray literature with recommendations for interventions and implicit links to the sustainable development goals. Based on research gaps uncovered in the review, future implementation science research needs to focus on designing, implementing, evaluating, and scaling: effective evidence-based socioeconomic interventions; equity-focused, redistributive, and transformative interventions; comprehensive packages of complementary interventions; interventions to upend root causes of systemic social inequities; collaborative and participatory approaches; interventions that integrate environmental sustainability; and city-level interventions. Failing to consider the environmental dimensions of economic recovery is shortsighted and will ultimately exacerbate social inequities and poverty and undermine economic stability in the long term.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

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