• Graduate Program
    • Why study Business Data Science?
    • Research Master
    • Admissions
    • Course Registration
    • Facilities
  • Research
  • News
  • Events
  • Alumni
  • Magazine
Home | Events Archive | SEMINAR HAS BEEN CANCELLED
Seminar

SEMINAR HAS BEEN CANCELLED


  • Speakers
    Ozan Candogan (University of Chicago, United States)
  • Field
    Econometrics, Spatial Economics, Data Science and Econometrics
  • Location
    Amsterdam
  • Date and time

    November 14, 2022
    11:00 - 12:00

Controlling Epidemic Spread: Reducing Economic Losses with Targeted Closures

Abstract
Data on population movements can be helpful in designing targeted policy responses to curb epidemic spread. However, it is not clear how to exactly leverage such data and how valuable they might be for the control of epidemics. To explore these questions, we study a spatial epidemic model that explicitly accounts for population movements and propose an optimization framework for obtaining targeted policies that restrict economic activity in different neighborhoods of a city at different levels. We focus on COVID-19 and calibrate our model using the mobile phone data that capture individuals’ movements within New York City (NYC). We use these data to illustrate that targeting can allow for substantially higher employment levels than uniform (city-wide) policies when applied to reduce infections across a region of focus. In our NYC example (which focuses on the control of the disease in April 2020), our main model illustrates that appropriate targeting achieves a reduction in infections in all neighborhoods while resuming 23.1%–42.4% of the baseline nonteleworkable employment level. By contrast, uniform restriction policies that achieve the same policy goal permit 3.92–6.25 times less nonteleworkable employment. Our optimization framework demonstrates the potential of targeting to limit the economic costs of unemployment while curbing the spread of an epidemic.

Register for on-site or online participation here.