Fiscal responses to COVID-19 outbreak for healthy economies: Modelling with big data analytics

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Date

2023

Authors

Gorkem Sariyer
Serpil Kahraman
Mert Erkan Sozen
Mustafa Gokalp Ataman

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ELSEVIER

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

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Publicly Funded

No
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Top 10%
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Average
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Top 10%

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Abstract

Fiscal responses to the COVID-19 crisis have varied a lot across countries. Using a panel of 127 countries over two separate subperiods between 2020 and 2021 this paper seeks to determine the extent that fiscal responses contributed to the spread and containment of the disease. The study first documents that rich countries which had the largest total and health-related fiscal responses achieved the lowest fatality rates defined as the ratio of COVID-related deaths to cases despite having the largest recorded numbers of cases and fatalities. The next most successful were less developed economies whose smaller total fiscal responses included a larger health-related component than emerging market economies. The study used a promising big data analytics technology the random forest algorithm to determine which factors explained a country's fatality rate. The findings indicate that a country's fatality ratio over the next period can be almost entirely predicted by its economic development level fiscal expenditure (both total and health-related) and initial fatality ratio. Finally the study conducted a counterfactual exercise to show that had less developed economies implemented the same fiscal responses as the rich (as a share of GDP) then their fatality ratios would have declined by 20.47% over the first period and 2.59% over the second one.

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Keywords

Fiscal policy, COVID-19, Economic development level, Big data analytics, Random forest, COVID-19, Fiscal Policy, Random Forest, Big Data Analytics, Economic Development Level, Article

Fields of Science

0502 economics and business, 05 social sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Scopus Q

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OpenCitations Citation Count
12

Source

Structural Change and Economic Dynamics

Volume

64

Issue

Start Page

191

End Page

198
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CrossRef : 9

Scopus : 16

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