Lockdown stringency and employment formality: evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa

被引:0
|
作者
Timothy Köhler
Haroon Bhorat
Robert Hill
Benjamin Stanwix
机构
[1] University of Cape Town,Development Policy Research Unit, School of Economics
关键词
South Africa; Lockdown; Lockdown stringency; COVID-19; Labour market; Formality; D04; J08; J20; J48; J88;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In response to COVID-19 most governments used some form of lockdown policy to manage the pandemic. This required making iterative policy decisions in a rapidly changing epidemiological environment resulting in varying levels of lockdown stringency over time. While studies estimating the labour market effects of lockdown policies exist in both developed and developing countries, there is limited evidence on the impact of variation in lockdown stringency, particularly in developing countries. Such variation may have large heterogenous effects both on aggregate and between worker groups. In this paper, we estimate the causal effect of lockdown stringency on employment probabilities, adopting a quasi-experimental design on unique labour force panel data from South Africa. South Africa is a useful case study given its upper-middle-income status and relatively small informal sector, thus serving as an example to a variety of developing and developed country economies. We find that the negative employment effects of the country’s lockdown policy were driven by effects on the informal sector. Furthermore, we observe important effect heterogeneity by employment formality as the stringency of the country’s lockdown regulations changed over time. We find that more stringent lockdown levels negatively affected informal, but not formal sector employment, while less stringent levels negatively affected formal, but not informal sector employment. From a policy perspective, evidence of such heterogeneity can inform decisions around the optimal targeting of support as the pandemic progresses and lockdown policies are reconsidered.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] COVID-19 pandemic lockdown: effects on the air quality of South Asia
    Kandari, Ritu
    Kumar, Ashwani
    ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 4 (03) : 543 - 549
  • [22] Predictors of mask-wearing during the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from South Africa
    Burger, Ronelle
    Christian, Carmen
    English, Rene
    Maughan-Brown, Brendan
    Rossouw, Laura
    TRANSLATIONAL BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2022, 12 (01) : 167 - 179
  • [23] Impact of COVID-19 lockdown on low birthweight in Soweto, South Africa
    Drysdale, R. E.
    Slemming, W.
    Momberg, D.
    Said-Mohamad, R.
    Richter, L. M.
    SAMJ SOUTH AFRICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2023, 113 (10): : 1432 - 1436
  • [24] The Impact of the COVID-19 Lockdown on Urban Street Litter in South Africa
    Ryan, Peter G.
    Maclean, Kyle
    Weideman, Eleanor A.
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESSES-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2020, 7 (04): : 1303 - 1312
  • [25] The Impact of the COVID-19 Lockdown on Urban Street Litter in South Africa
    Peter G. Ryan
    Kyle Maclean
    Eleanor A. Weideman
    Environmental Processes, 2020, 7 : 1303 - 1312
  • [26] Pandemic responsiveness: Evidence from social distancing and lockdown policy during COVID-19
    Besley, Timothy
    Dray, Sacha
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (05):
  • [27] Policing the (post)colonial body: The Covid-19 lockdown in South Africa
    Reed, Amber
    Xaso, Ziyanda
    ANTHROPOLOGY SOUTHERN AFRICA, 2022, 45 (02) : 92 - 104
  • [28] Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on suicide: evidence from South Korea
    Kim, Dongyoung
    Kim, Pyoungsik
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2025, 25 (01)
  • [29] Gender inequality and the COVID-19 crisis: Evidence from a large national survey during South Africa's lockdown
    Casale, Daniela
    Posel, Dorrit
    RESEARCH IN SOCIAL STRATIFICATION AND MOBILITY, 2021, 71
  • [30] Living under lockdown in the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa: anxious voices from the unplanned shift to online therapy
    Knight, Zelda Gillian
    RESEARCH IN PSYCHOTHERAPY-PSYCHOPATHOLOGY PROCESS AND OUTCOME, 2020, 23 (03): : 202 - 210