Abstract:
Real-time data, state-of-the-art models, multi-dimensional impact assessments, and
comprehensiveness are needed to reduce pandemic development impacts. This research
supplements early efforts done in mitigating the pandemic effects and can be used as an
input in mitigation efforts of future pandemics if any. This study investigates COVID-19's
non-pharmaceutical and pharmaceutical response policies impact on sustainable
development objectives (micro-macro, short-run-long-run, dynamic and systemic,
parametric-non-parametric, reduced-form-structural, direct-indirect, exogenousendogenous).
Near-real-time databases (high-frequency COVID-19 household phone
survey data, standard gravity model variables, quarterly reports of national accounts,
COVID-19 pandemic daily data, Google trends) and state-of-the-art models (e.g. semiparametric
panel data models, Bayesian econometrics, Rasch model, and other machine
learning models) are used to satisfy pandemic mitigation's quick and reliable information
demand. The pandemic has Micro-level and short-run impacts. Short-run and long-run
evidence are inconsistent. Micro- and macro and other dimensions of impact results are
mixed. One-dimensional impact measurements obscure important information. Pandemic
uncertainty in national account system or a multiplier effect analysis only explains exports
(SDG 17) (10.45%), state fragility (SDG 16) (6.08%) (correlation, not causation based on
economic theory and context) and catastrophe uncertainty (SDG 13) (by 15.31 percent).
Pandemic factors only explain total exports. Other national account system variables
explained each other better than the pandemic (transport CPI (SDG 7) explains 18.38% of
food CPI (SDG 2) variance, while food CPI explains 26.98% of general CPI variation
(SDG 1)). Non-pharmaceutical and pharmaceutical COVID-19 responses have different
effects. The former declines demand for services(SDG 9) and bilateral exports (e.g., the
non-pharmaceutical policy elasticity of demand for tourism is -0.49 and the COVID-19
interaction term elasticity of bilateral exports is -0.10 in the non-pharmaceutical
regression). The latter enhances service demand and bilateral exports (the pharmaceutical
(vaccination) policy elasticity of retail trade (SDG 17) is 0.04 and the COVID-19 elasticity
of bilateral exports is 0.05). Variable ICT demand (SDG 9) is co-integrated with
both non-pharmaceutical and pharmaceutical COVID-19 response policies. This is due to
COVID-19 and zoom software-a proxy for ICT demand long absence and exponential cooccurrence.
ICT demand is the variable highly influenced by non-pharmaceutical (Nonpharmaceutical
policy elasticity of ICT demand is 0.33) and slightly influenced by
pharmaceutical (vaccine) policies (pharmaceutical policy elasticity of ICT demand is -
0.11). ICT demand adjust speedily to its long-run equilibrium (-0.90 for nonpharmaceutical
policy shocks and -0.80 for pharmaceutical (vaccine) policy shocks).
Bilateral import in Ethiopia are a variable to observe since it is unaffected by the
pandemic burden (cases and deaths) or response policies. Ethiopia's permissive nonpharmaceutical
policies, low vaccine coverage, and the weak pandemic may be to blame.
Again, for bilateral import (SDG 17) (e.g. it is not affected by GDP (SDG 8)), the
important factors in its regression are different from those for bilateral export, deviating
from trade literature. Again, Only the first lag of total export explains (99%) total import
variation in national accounts. The interaction term, which enters the trade and demand
for service model due to overlapping COVID-19 cases, fatalities, non-pharmaceutical
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policies, and pharmaceutical policies, has a negative significant coefficient on bilateral
export regressed on the four COVID-19-related variables. (COVID-19 interaction term
elasticity of bilateral export is -0.13, -0.11, -0.10, -0.15 for COVID-19 cases, COVID-19
deaths, non-pharmaceutical policy, and pharmaceutical (vaccination) policy respectively).
When included in the model, it takes the sign of COVID-19 cases, fatalities, and nonpharmaceutical
policies but not vaccination policies since it is more connected with the
pandemic burden and non-pharmaceutical policies. For the bilateral export sample, the
interaction term is interpreted. Bilateral export is explained by state fragility (SDG 16).
(the state fragility elasticity of bilateral export is 0.80). Ethiopia exports more to fragile
states. Short-term pandemic effects differ by consumption quintile (SDG 1), gender (SDG
5), sector (rural/urban) (SDG 11), region/ethnicity (SDG 10) and time. Poor, rural, and
female-headed households are affected more. June 2020–April 2021 show improvements
than May 2020. The pandemic's effects were short-run. Macro models show little long-run
pandemic effect or co-integration with other variables except ICT demand. As
expected, highest-order (exogenous) variables aren't explained by lower-order variables
(the most endogenous ones). All conventional gravity model variables are at their expected
signs. This research at least has three original results. Physical size (area) and
technological size (patent) variables that are usually absent from the gravity model (and
are sources of endogeneity) found to be statistically significant determinants of trade (SDG
17) (area (SDG 8) has linear negative effect and patent (SDG 9) has linear positive effect);
two, mean GDP (SDG 8) is found to have a statistically significant non-linear relationship
with bilateral export (it has non-linear positive effect); three, mean uncertainty (SDG 13)
caused by man-made and natural disasters found to be statistically significant determinant
of bilateral import (negative effect). Micro- and macro-analyses indicate the pandemic's
shot-run impact. Low- and middle-income employee income growth, improving producers'
knowledge, focusing on the COVID-19 vaccine, promoting online learning, eliminating all
forms of violence, reducing water pollution, digitalizing the energy industry, work-fromhome
options, automation, eliminating outcomes inequities, decarbonization strategies,
and fostering collaborations are few of the policy implications of the entire
recommendation.