Author: Blundell, Richard; Costa Dias, Monica; Joyce, Robert; Xu, Xiaowei
Title: COVIDâ€19 and Inequalities Cord-id: fe72aj3a Document date: 2020_7_14
ID: fe72aj3a
Snippet: This paper brings together evidence from various data sources and the most recent studies to describe what we know so far about the impacts of the COVIDâ€19 crisis on inequalities across several key domains of life, including employment and ability to earn, family life and health. We show how these new fissures interact with existing inequalities along various key dimensions, including socioâ€economic status, education, age, gender, ethnicity and geography. We find that the deep underlying ine
Document: This paper brings together evidence from various data sources and the most recent studies to describe what we know so far about the impacts of the COVIDâ€19 crisis on inequalities across several key domains of life, including employment and ability to earn, family life and health. We show how these new fissures interact with existing inequalities along various key dimensions, including socioâ€economic status, education, age, gender, ethnicity and geography. We find that the deep underlying inequalities and policy challenges that we already had are crucial in understanding the complex impacts of the pandemic itself and our response to it, and that the crisis does in itself have the potential to exacerbate some of these preâ€existing inequalities fairly directly. Moreover, it seems likely that the current crisis will leave legacies that will impact inequalities in the long term. These possibilities are not all disequalising, but many are.
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