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QLS Seminar Series - Troy Day

Tuesday, April 11, 2023 12:00to13:00

The Epidemiology and Economics of Physical Distancing during Infectious Disease Outbreaks

Troy Day, Queen's University
Tuesday April 11, 12-1pm
Zoom Link: https://mcgill.zoom.us/j/86855481591

Abstract: People's incentives during an infectious disease outbreak influence their behaviour, and this behaviour can impact how the outbreak unfolds. Early on during an outbreak, people are at little personal risk of infection and hence may be unwilling to change their lifestyle to slow the spread of disease. As the number of cases grows, however, people may then voluntarily take extreme measures to limit their exposure. In this talk I will use ideas from game theory to model how individuals’ incentives change during an outbreak, and the epidemiological and economic consequences that ensue when these incentives are acted upon. Motivated by the COVID-19 pandemic, I focus on physical distancing behaviour. I show that there is a fundamental difference in the political, economic, and health consequences of an infectious disease outbreak depending on the degree of asymptomatic transmission. If transmission occurs primarily by asymptomatic carriers, then politicians will be incentivized to impose stay-at-home orders earlier and for longer than individuals would like. Despite such orders being unpopular, however, they ultimately benefit all individuals. On the other hand, if the disease is transmitted primarily by symptomatic infections, then individuals are incentivized to stay at home earlier and for longer than politicians would like. In this case, politicians will be incentivized to impose back-to-work orders that, despite being unpopular, will again ultimately be to the benefit of all individuals.

This is joint work with David McAdams, Fuqua School of Business and Economics Department, Duke University.

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