Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.

The difference in COVID 19 death rates across political regimes has caught a lot of attention. The “efficient autocracy” view suggests that autocracies may be more efficient at putting in place policies that contain COVID 19 spread. On the other hand, the “biasing autocracy” view underlines that aut...

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Main Authors: Guilhem Cassan, Milan Van Steenvoort
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-12-01
Series:SSM: Population Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001877
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spelling doaj-e7712b348bfa4af7851baf913d0ceb172021-09-25T05:08:45ZengElsevierSSM: Population Health2352-82732021-12-0116100912Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.Guilhem Cassan0Milan Van Steenvoort1University of Namur, CEPR, DEFIPP, CRED and CEPREMAP, Rue de Bruxelles 61, 5000, Namur, BelgiumMaastricht University Tongersestraat 53, 6211LM, Maastricht, Netherlands; Corresponding author.The difference in COVID 19 death rates across political regimes has caught a lot of attention. The “efficient autocracy” view suggests that autocracies may be more efficient at putting in place policies that contain COVID 19 spread. On the other hand, the “biasing autocracy” view underlines that autocracies may be under reporting their COVID 19 data. We use fixed effect panel regression methods to discriminate between the two sides of the debate. Our results present a more nuanced picture: once pre-determined characteristics of countries are accounted for, COVID 19 death rates equalize across political regimes during the first months of the pandemic, but remain largely different a year into the pandemic. This emphasizes that early differences across political regimes were mainly due to omitted variable bias, whereas later differences are likely due to data manipulation by autocracies. A year into the pandemic, we estimate that this data manipulation may have hidden approximately 400,000 deaths worldwide.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001877COVID 19Political regimesDemocracyAutocracyPublic health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guilhem Cassan
Milan Van Steenvoort
spellingShingle Guilhem Cassan
Milan Van Steenvoort
Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.
SSM: Population Health
COVID 19
Political regimes
Democracy
Autocracy
Public health
author_facet Guilhem Cassan
Milan Van Steenvoort
author_sort Guilhem Cassan
title Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.
title_short Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.
title_full Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.
title_fullStr Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Political regime and COVID 19 death rate: Efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?An econometric analysis.
title_sort political regime and covid 19 death rate: efficient, biasing or simply different autocracies?an econometric analysis.
publisher Elsevier
series SSM: Population Health
issn 2352-8273
publishDate 2021-12-01
description The difference in COVID 19 death rates across political regimes has caught a lot of attention. The “efficient autocracy” view suggests that autocracies may be more efficient at putting in place policies that contain COVID 19 spread. On the other hand, the “biasing autocracy” view underlines that autocracies may be under reporting their COVID 19 data. We use fixed effect panel regression methods to discriminate between the two sides of the debate. Our results present a more nuanced picture: once pre-determined characteristics of countries are accounted for, COVID 19 death rates equalize across political regimes during the first months of the pandemic, but remain largely different a year into the pandemic. This emphasizes that early differences across political regimes were mainly due to omitted variable bias, whereas later differences are likely due to data manipulation by autocracies. A year into the pandemic, we estimate that this data manipulation may have hidden approximately 400,000 deaths worldwide.
topic COVID 19
Political regimes
Democracy
Autocracy
Public health
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001877
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AT milanvansteenvoort politicalregimeandcovid19deathrateefficientbiasingorsimplydifferentautocraciesaneconometricanalysis
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