discussion paper

Consumer immobility predicts both macroeconomic contractions and household poverty during COVID-19

by Derek D. Headey,
Ame Cho,
Isabel Lambrecht,
Elisa Maria Maffioli and
Russell Toth
Open Access
Citation
Headey, Derek D.; Cho, Ame; Lambrecht, Isabel; Maffioli, Elisa Maria; and Toth, Russell. 2021. Consumer immobility predicts both macroeconomic contractions and household poverty during COVID-19. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2002. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134272

Amid extreme uncertainty during the COVID-19 pandemic, economic policymakers have struggled to respond to rapidly changing circumstances with appropriate speed and scale. One policy obstacle is the dearth of real-time indicators of the pandemic’s economic impacts, especially in low and middle income countries (LMICs). Here we show that an ‘immobility’ indicator from GoogleTM – measuring the extent to which consumers are staying at home more – is a powerful predictor of changes in household poverty in Myanmar, as well as aggregate national consumption and gross domestic product (GDP) in cross-country data. Combined, this evidence suggests that real-time mobility indicators have the potential to inform a wide range of policy deliberations, including forecasting models, fine-tuning the timing of both economic stimulus and social protection interventions, and tracking economic recovery from this unprecedented crisis.