The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa

The 2014 outbreak of the Ebola virus disease in West Africa has taken a devastating human toll. Although the outbreak originated in rural Guinea, it has hit hardest in Liberia and Sierra Leone, in part because it has reached urban areas in these tw...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
AIR
GDP
TAX
WFP
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/10/20270083/economic-impact-2014-ebola-epidemic-short-medium-term-estimates-west-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20396
id okr-10986-20396
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ADVERSE EFFECTS
AGED
AGRICULTURAL GROWTH
AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
AGRICULTURE
AIR
AIRPORT
BARS
BEER
BEVERAGES
BORDER CROSSINGS
BORDER TRAFFIC
BOTTLED WATER
BOTTLENECKS
BREWERY
CANDLES
CAPITAL FLIGHT
CASSAVA
CENTRAL BANK
COCOA
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CONSUMER PURCHASING
CONTAGION
CONTAINERS
DEMAND FOR FOOD
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DIESEL
DIESEL FUEL
DIMINISHING RETURNS
DISEASE
DISEASE CONTROL
DISEASE OUTBREAKS
DISEASES
DOMESTIC TRANSPORT
DOMESTIC TRAVEL
EBOLA
EBOLA VIRUS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC FORECASTING
ECONOMIC IMPACT
ECONOMIC SECTORS
EDIBLE OILS
EMERGENCY MEASURES
EMERGENCY RESPONSE
EPIDEMIC
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORT GROWTH
EXPORTS
FAMILIES
FLIGHT CANCELLATIONS
FLIGHT CONNECTIONS
FOOD INSECURITY
FOOD PRICES
FOOD PRODUCTION
FOOD PRODUCTS
FOOD RATIONS
FOOD SECURITY
FOOD SHORTAGES
FOOD STAPLES
FOOD STOCKS
FOOD TRANSPORT
FOODS
FORECASTS
FRUIT
FUEL
FUEL PRICES
GDP
GROWTH PROJECTIONS
GROWTH RATE
HAND WASHING
HAZARD
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CONDITIONS
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
HEALTH WORKERS
HOSPITALS
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INFECTION
INFLATION
INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL
IRON
ISOLATION
LEADING INDICATORS
LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
MACROECONOMICS
MALNUTRITION
MARKETING
MEDICINE
MIGRATION
MOBILITY
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
NURSES
OILS & FATS
PALM OIL
PASSENGERS
PATIENT
PATIENTS
PER CAPITA INCOME
PLASTICS
PRICE INCREASES
PUBLIC HEALTH
PURCHASING POWER
REAL GDP
RESTAURANTS
RICE
ROAD
ROAD CONDITIONS
ROOMS
RUBBER
SOFT DRINKS
SYMPTOMS
TAX
TAX REVENUE
TAXIS
TOLL
TOTAL REVENUE
TRAFFIC
TRANSIT
TRANSIT TRADE
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT SECTOR
TRANSPORTATION
TRAVELERS
TREATMENT
TRUE
VICTIMS
WEALTH
WFP
WHEAT
WORLD FOOD PROGRAM
spellingShingle ADVERSE EFFECTS
AGED
AGRICULTURAL GROWTH
AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
AGRICULTURE
AIR
AIRPORT
BARS
BEER
BEVERAGES
BORDER CROSSINGS
BORDER TRAFFIC
BOTTLED WATER
BOTTLENECKS
BREWERY
CANDLES
CAPITAL FLIGHT
CASSAVA
CENTRAL BANK
COCOA
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CONSUMER PURCHASING
CONTAGION
CONTAINERS
DEMAND FOR FOOD
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DIESEL
DIESEL FUEL
DIMINISHING RETURNS
DISEASE
DISEASE CONTROL
DISEASE OUTBREAKS
DISEASES
DOMESTIC TRANSPORT
DOMESTIC TRAVEL
EBOLA
EBOLA VIRUS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC FORECASTING
ECONOMIC IMPACT
ECONOMIC SECTORS
EDIBLE OILS
EMERGENCY MEASURES
EMERGENCY RESPONSE
EPIDEMIC
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORT GROWTH
EXPORTS
FAMILIES
FLIGHT CANCELLATIONS
FLIGHT CONNECTIONS
FOOD INSECURITY
FOOD PRICES
FOOD PRODUCTION
FOOD PRODUCTS
FOOD RATIONS
FOOD SECURITY
FOOD SHORTAGES
FOOD STAPLES
FOOD STOCKS
FOOD TRANSPORT
FOODS
FORECASTS
FRUIT
FUEL
FUEL PRICES
GDP
GROWTH PROJECTIONS
GROWTH RATE
HAND WASHING
HAZARD
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CONDITIONS
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
HEALTH WORKERS
HOSPITALS
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INFECTION
INFLATION
INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL
IRON
ISOLATION
LEADING INDICATORS
LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
MACROECONOMICS
MALNUTRITION
MARKETING
MEDICINE
MIGRATION
MOBILITY
MORBIDITY
MORTALITY
NURSES
OILS & FATS
PALM OIL
PASSENGERS
PATIENT
PATIENTS
PER CAPITA INCOME
PLASTICS
PRICE INCREASES
PUBLIC HEALTH
PURCHASING POWER
REAL GDP
RESTAURANTS
RICE
ROAD
ROAD CONDITIONS
ROOMS
RUBBER
SOFT DRINKS
SYMPTOMS
TAX
TAX REVENUE
TAXIS
TOLL
TOTAL REVENUE
TRAFFIC
TRANSIT
TRANSIT TRADE
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT SECTOR
TRANSPORTATION
TRAVELERS
TREATMENT
TRUE
VICTIMS
WEALTH
WFP
WHEAT
WORLD FOOD PROGRAM
World Bank Group
The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa
geographic_facet Africa
West Africa
description The 2014 outbreak of the Ebola virus disease in West Africa has taken a devastating human toll. Although the outbreak originated in rural Guinea, it has hit hardest in Liberia and Sierra Leone, in part because it has reached urban areas in these two countries, a factor that distinguishes this outbreak from previous episodes elsewhere. As of October 3, 2014, there had been 3,431 recorded deaths out of 7,470 probable, suspected, or confirmed cases of Ebola. This report informs the response to the epidemic by presenting best-effort estimates of its macroeconomic and fiscal effects. Any such exercise is necessarily highly imprecise due to limited data and many uncertain factors, but it is still necessary in order to plan the economic assistance that must accompany the immediate humanitarian response. The goal is to help affected countries to recover and return to the robust economic growth they had experienced until the onset of this crisis. This document presents the World Bank's preliminary estimates of the economic impact of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa for 2014 (short term impact) and 2015 (medium term impact). Section 2 presents a single set of 2014 estimates for Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, based on available data on current economic activity as well as assumptions about the short-term impact. It also presents current data on the limited current impacts on other countries in the region. Section 3 presents estimates for the impact by the end of 2015 for Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone, as well as estimates for West Africa as a whole. Because the epidemic and the behavioral responses to it have more time to diverge over the course of 2015, Section 3 presents two scenarios for 2015, which vary in the optimism of their assumptions regarding the epidemic and the success of donor and government policy and efforts to control it. The take-away messages from this analysis are a low Ebola scenario that corresponds to rapid containment within the three most severely affected countries, and a high Ebola scenario corresponds to slower containment in the three countries, with some broader regional contagion. A swift policy reaction by the international community is crucial. With potential the economic costs of the Ebola epidemic being so high, very substantial containment and mitigation expenditures would be cost-effective, if they successfully avert the worst epidemiological outcomes. To mitigate the medium term economic impact of the outbreak, current efforts by many partners to strengthen the health systems and fill the fiscal gaps in the core three countries are key priorities. Finally, this report does not take into account the longer term impacts generated by mortality, failure to treat other health conditions due to aversion behavior and lack of supply capacity, school closings and dropouts, and other shocks to livelihoods. It is truly focused on the short and medium-term inputs, over the next 18 months.
format Publications & Research :: Working Paper
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa
title_short The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa
title_full The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa
title_fullStr The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa
title_full_unstemmed The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa
title_sort economic impact of the 2014 ebola epidemic : short and medium term estimates for west africa
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/10/20270083/economic-impact-2014-ebola-epidemic-short-medium-term-estimates-west-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20396
_version_ 1764445310986223616
spelling okr-10986-203962021-04-23T14:03:55Z The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for West Africa World Bank Group ADVERSE EFFECTS AGED AGRICULTURAL GROWTH AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AGRICULTURE AIR AIRPORT BARS BEER BEVERAGES BORDER CROSSINGS BORDER TRAFFIC BOTTLED WATER BOTTLENECKS BREWERY CANDLES CAPITAL FLIGHT CASSAVA CENTRAL BANK COCOA CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY CONSUMER PRICE INDEX CONSUMER PURCHASING CONTAGION CONTAINERS DEMAND FOR FOOD DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DIESEL DIESEL FUEL DIMINISHING RETURNS DISEASE DISEASE CONTROL DISEASE OUTBREAKS DISEASES DOMESTIC TRANSPORT DOMESTIC TRAVEL EBOLA EBOLA VIRUS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC FORECASTING ECONOMIC IMPACT ECONOMIC SECTORS EDIBLE OILS EMERGENCY MEASURES EMERGENCY RESPONSE EPIDEMIC EXCHANGE RATES EXPORT GROWTH EXPORTS FAMILIES FLIGHT CANCELLATIONS FLIGHT CONNECTIONS FOOD INSECURITY FOOD PRICES FOOD PRODUCTION FOOD PRODUCTS FOOD RATIONS FOOD SECURITY FOOD SHORTAGES FOOD STAPLES FOOD STOCKS FOOD TRANSPORT FOODS FORECASTS FRUIT FUEL FUEL PRICES GDP GROWTH PROJECTIONS GROWTH RATE HAND WASHING HAZARD HEALTH CARE HEALTH CONDITIONS HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH WORKERS HOSPITALS HUMAN CAPITAL INCOME INFECTION INFLATION INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL IRON ISOLATION LEADING INDICATORS LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES MACROECONOMICS MALNUTRITION MARKETING MEDICINE MIGRATION MOBILITY MORBIDITY MORTALITY NURSES OILS & FATS PALM OIL PASSENGERS PATIENT PATIENTS PER CAPITA INCOME PLASTICS PRICE INCREASES PUBLIC HEALTH PURCHASING POWER REAL GDP RESTAURANTS RICE ROAD ROAD CONDITIONS ROOMS RUBBER SOFT DRINKS SYMPTOMS TAX TAX REVENUE TAXIS TOLL TOTAL REVENUE TRAFFIC TRANSIT TRANSIT TRADE TRANSPORT TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION TRAVELERS TREATMENT TRUE VICTIMS WEALTH WFP WHEAT WORLD FOOD PROGRAM The 2014 outbreak of the Ebola virus disease in West Africa has taken a devastating human toll. Although the outbreak originated in rural Guinea, it has hit hardest in Liberia and Sierra Leone, in part because it has reached urban areas in these two countries, a factor that distinguishes this outbreak from previous episodes elsewhere. As of October 3, 2014, there had been 3,431 recorded deaths out of 7,470 probable, suspected, or confirmed cases of Ebola. This report informs the response to the epidemic by presenting best-effort estimates of its macroeconomic and fiscal effects. Any such exercise is necessarily highly imprecise due to limited data and many uncertain factors, but it is still necessary in order to plan the economic assistance that must accompany the immediate humanitarian response. The goal is to help affected countries to recover and return to the robust economic growth they had experienced until the onset of this crisis. This document presents the World Bank's preliminary estimates of the economic impact of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa for 2014 (short term impact) and 2015 (medium term impact). Section 2 presents a single set of 2014 estimates for Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, based on available data on current economic activity as well as assumptions about the short-term impact. It also presents current data on the limited current impacts on other countries in the region. Section 3 presents estimates for the impact by the end of 2015 for Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone, as well as estimates for West Africa as a whole. Because the epidemic and the behavioral responses to it have more time to diverge over the course of 2015, Section 3 presents two scenarios for 2015, which vary in the optimism of their assumptions regarding the epidemic and the success of donor and government policy and efforts to control it. The take-away messages from this analysis are a low Ebola scenario that corresponds to rapid containment within the three most severely affected countries, and a high Ebola scenario corresponds to slower containment in the three countries, with some broader regional contagion. A swift policy reaction by the international community is crucial. With potential the economic costs of the Ebola epidemic being so high, very substantial containment and mitigation expenditures would be cost-effective, if they successfully avert the worst epidemiological outcomes. To mitigate the medium term economic impact of the outbreak, current efforts by many partners to strengthen the health systems and fill the fiscal gaps in the core three countries are key priorities. Finally, this report does not take into account the longer term impacts generated by mortality, failure to treat other health conditions due to aversion behavior and lack of supply capacity, school closings and dropouts, and other shocks to livelihoods. It is truly focused on the short and medium-term inputs, over the next 18 months. 2014-10-09T13:23:33Z 2014-10-09T13:23:33Z 2014-10-07 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/10/20270083/economic-impact-2014-ebola-epidemic-short-medium-term-estimates-west-africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20396 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research Africa West Africa