key: cord-0764780-6es681jp authors: Olbrecht, Alexandre title: Human Suffering and Natural Experiments: How Empirical Economics can unmask the devastation of Covid-19 date: 2021-09-08 journal: East Econ J DOI: 10.1057/s41302-021-00198-4 sha: 81832221bb4d96ebbc67b7191341d6813f0e33a4 doc_id: 764780 cord_uid: 6es681jp nan Anisfield School of Business at Ramapo College of New Jersey and the Executive Director of the Eastern Economic Association, New Jersey, US dramatically in a very short time period. As the pandemic continues, some changes will become permanent, while others will eventually return to pre-pandemic status, and in other cases, the pandemic has merely accelerated changes already occurring in the economy. While the pandemic forced the permanent closure of many businesses, some entrepreneurs created new opportunities. In this issue, Berdiev and Saunoris (2021) find that the pandemic provided a fertile backdrop for new entrepreneurial activity. In addition to worrying about collapsing economies, governments were forced to also address a public health crisis. The approaches used across the world varied greatly, and Clyde, Kakolyris and Koimisis (2021) evaluate the effectiveness of seven different containment strategies across various OECD countries. Their results reveal that school closings and public transportation closings were the only policies to have lasting impacts; whereas stay-at-home policies only decreased Covid-19 transmission after a 70-day delay. In the United States, the governmental response to a global pandemic was left up to individual states, with President Donald Trump essentially abdicating any coordinated federal response other than Operation Warp Speed. This meant that all 50 states, headed by individual governors, were forced to make decisions on whether to enact lockdowns, mandate mask requirements, or take other measures, and if so, how strict those measures should be. McCannon (2021) looks at the effects of various policies within the United States by governors and suggests that governors followed the interests of their constituents for the most part. From the perspective of the economics profession, the pandemic provided a unique opportunity to evaluate the effects of a global pandemic by asking interesting research questions, but the human cost has been staggering. As of July 6, 2021 there have been over 183 million cases globally of Covid-19, with sadly almost 4 million deaths (see WHO website). Bizuneh and Geremew (2021) looked at how Covid-19 affected various economies. Much like Buchel, Legge, Pochon and Wegmuller (2020) did for Switzerland, Bizuneh et al (2021) found that Covid-19 decreased GDP growth significantly and the EME countries also faced increased stress in their credit markets. In the United States, 22.2 million jobs were lost due to the pandemic (see Mutikani, 2021) . But those numbers don't measure the true cost of the suffering both here in the United States and across the world. Huato and Chavez (2021) demonstrate that mental health measures deteriorated as a result of Covid-19 among the general population, and thus argue that when the total cost of Covid-19 is calculated, mental health deaths by suicide and other causes as indirect deaths due to this pandemic should be quantified and considered. In this special issue of the Eastern Economic Journal, we look at how the world has changed due to Covid-19, evaluate the responses from government officials, and try to measure the mental health costs to this pandemic. In addition, we try to understand why the pandemic was worse in some areas as opposed to others. Ang and Murray (2021) looked at how educational attainment, specifically math scores, seemed to be correlated with pandemic outcomes. They found that higher level of mathematical achievement, most likely a proxy variable reflective of overall educational attainment, was associated with lower rates of Covid infection. Medical experts tell us that sadly it is likely there will be another global pandemic in our lifetimes, and remind us daily that this one isn't over. Yet as economists, we tend to focus on the empirical effects of some natural experiment so that we can use statistical analysis to isolate a causality, holding all else constant. But as every reader of this special issue can tell you, Covid-19 has changed their lives, whether it be how they go to work or perhaps sadly the loss of a loved one. This might be the one case in the economics profession when we ask the question, what are the economic effects of Covid-19 and only one data point matters, your own. While I don't know how this pandemic will end, I do know that the normal ending of an introduction of a special issue of the Eastern Economic Journal should focus on highlighting the articles contained therein, provide context for the readers of the Journal of these articles, and hopefully provide enough academic and intellectual curiosity to motivate additional research in the area of Covid-19 and economics. But this isn't an ordinary issue and so I close with the following: the parade in New York City down the Canyon of Heroes on July 7, 2021, honoring all the medical and essential workers of the city, was a shining example to the thanks and gratitude the world owes all medical and essential workers during this time. Appropriately, like defeating this pandemic, this article begins and ends by mentioning the true heroes of our time. Education in Mathematics and the Spread of Covid-19 Do Disease Epidemics Stimulate or Repress Entrepreneurial Activity? Assessing the Impact of Covid-19 Pandemic on Emerging Market Economies' (EMEs) Sovereign Bond Risk Premium and Fiscal Solvency Swiss trade during the COVID-19 pandemic: an early appraisal A Study of the Effectiveness of Governmental Strategies for Managing Mortality from Covid-19 /? gclid= CjwKC Ajww-CGBhA LEiwA QzWxO qFzp4 G8LdC Bo48u VkNDw WqqHG 6tM4U cGMqR G1Gij JY80k cQxLT-WRoCL gAQAvD_ BwE Household Income, Pandemic-Related Income Loss, and the Probability of Anxiety and Depression Do Governors Lead or Follow? Timing of Stay at Home Orders U.S. economy loses jobs as COVID-19 hammers restaurants, bars What NYC Sounds Like Every Night at