Introduction to the Special Issue: COVID-19 and Its Impact on Racial/Ethnic Groups
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EDITORIAL
Introduction to the Special Issue: COVID-19 and Its Impact on Racial/Ethnic Groups Gregory N. Price 1 Accepted: 16 November 2020 # Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020
As of December 2020, the global human Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic continued after the first human infections were reported in China in December of 2019. Almost immediately, social scientists aimed their disciplinary gaze on COVID-19 and have attempted to explain the causes and consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. Early evidence suggested that the incidence of COVID-19 infections among individuals was not neutral with respect to geography, gender, age, and race/ethnicity (Blundell et al. 2020; Cheng et al. 2020; Islam et al. 2020; Kemp et al. 2020; Obeng-Odoom 2020; Rose-Redwood et al. 2020). This special issue of the Journal of Economics, Race, and Policy features contributions from social scientists that provide further insights into how the COVID-19 pandemic intersects with race, ethnicity, gender, religion, and geography. The four contributions, all subject to external critical peer review, while advancing our knowledge on the consequences of COVID-19, also report results that could potentially inform policies to mitigate the disproportionate race, ethnicity, gender, religion, and geography effects of COVID-19. Ajide, Alimi, Ibrahim, and Nwokolo explore the role of ethno-religious factors and its intersection with political economy in Nigeria. They find that ethnicity and religion intersect in Nigeria so as to condition the incidence of COVID-19. They find for example that the incidence of COVID-19 is relatively higher among the Hausa ethnic group, which appears to be conditioned on the interaction between educational attainment and particular religious beliefs regarding who has the sovereignty of the human soul. Their findings suggest that to be effective, COVID-19 mitigation policies in Nigeria should be conditioned on ethnic/religious considerations. * Gregory N. Price [email protected] 1
Department of Economics and Finance, University of New Orleans, New Orleans, LA 70148, USA
Benitez, Courtmanche, and Yelowitz examine racial and ethnic disparities in confirmed COVID-19 cases across six diverse US cities at the zip code level. Controlling for nonracial/ethnic characteristics, they find evidence that the proportions of Black and Hispanic residents in a ZIP code were associated with higher COVID-19 cases per capita, and the association was even stronger for Hispanic residents. Their findings suggest that the higher death toll of COVID-19 in predominantly Black and Hispanic communities mostly reflects higher case rates, rather than higher fatality rates for confirmed cases. This suggests COVID-19 mitigation policies in the USA should be tailored to recognize the racially/ ethnically disparate rates of COVID-19 infections, relative to associated COVID-19 fatalities. Gezici and Ozay consider the racialized and gendered effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the probability of being unemployed in the USA. Their findings cast the unempl
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