Adapting to an aggregate shock: The impact of the Covid-19 crisis on rural households
Mahmud, M; Riley, E
Date: 8 September 2022
Article
Journal
Review of Economics of the Household
Publisher
Springer
Publisher DOI
Abstract
We examine the response of rural Ugandan households to a large aggregate shock, the Covid-19 pandemic, during and one year after the rst lockdown in March 2020. Using 6 rounds of phone surveys from 558 households in western Uganda, we fi nd that household
income recovery from the lockdown di ers by whether households had a ...
We examine the response of rural Ugandan households to a large aggregate shock, the Covid-19 pandemic, during and one year after the rst lockdown in March 2020. Using 6 rounds of phone surveys from 558 households in western Uganda, we fi nd that household
income recovery from the lockdown di ers by whether households had a business
pre-pandemic. After an initial sharp fall, the incomes of those without a business have
recovered to pre-pandemic levels. However, the relatively better-o households with a
business before the pandemic still have one-third lower income, due to sustained closure of businesses even after the end of the rst lockdown restrictions. Additionally,
business-owning households have 30% lower wealth one-year into the pandemic, driven by 44% lower assets, 45% drop in savings, and a 15 fold increase in net-borrowing, suggesting long-term damage. With Covid-19 causing a continued threat, our findings point to the
need to support households who face dwindling nances to fall back on.
Economics
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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