COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis

In this note we estimate the short-term economic impact of the COVID-19 crisis on Brazilian families vis-a-vis labor shocks. The analysis, using a microsimulation model which incorporates subnational shocks from a computable general equilibrium growth model, shows that over 30 million workers in Brazil may see significant reductions in their labor income in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Two-thirds of these workers are informal workers or own-account workers, groups without access to unemployment protection. These household shocks would reduce average per capita income by 7.6 percent, with the largest impact on the second and third quintiles of the income distribution. These income shocks are inequality-increasing: without any mitigation measures, inequality would increase by 4 percent. The country’s first line of defense, its existing unemployment insurance system, reduces the income shock to 5.3 percent. Even so, an additional 8.4 million Brazilians could fall into poverty. The policy responses announced by the government, and particularly the Auxilio Emergencial (AE) transfer, have the potential to fully absorb the labor income shock for the poorest 40 percent and reduce poverty. Yet, these results reflect annualized income, obscuring the sharp reduction in monthly income if demand shocks persist after the AE ends. Looking towards the next phase of the response, considering extensions of AE that are either less generous or more restricted provide a fiscally prudent approach for continuing to support Brazil’s most vulnerable.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cereda, Fabio, Rubiao, Rafael M., Sousa, Liliana D.
Format: Policy Note biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020-07-31
Subjects:CORONAVIRUS, COVID-19, LABOR MARKET, POVERTY, UNEMPLOYMENT, PANDEMIC IMPACT, INFORMAL SECTOR, INEQUALITY, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, SOCIAL PROTECTION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/883191597258941357/COVID-19-Labor-Market-Shocks-and-Poverty-in-Brazil-A-Microsimulation-Analysis
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34372
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098634372
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986343722021-05-25T09:58:09Z COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis Cereda, Fabio Rubiao, Rafael M. Sousa, Liliana D. CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 LABOR MARKET POVERTY UNEMPLOYMENT PANDEMIC IMPACT INFORMAL SECTOR INEQUALITY INCOME DISTRIBUTION SOCIAL PROTECTION In this note we estimate the short-term economic impact of the COVID-19 crisis on Brazilian families vis-a-vis labor shocks. The analysis, using a microsimulation model which incorporates subnational shocks from a computable general equilibrium growth model, shows that over 30 million workers in Brazil may see significant reductions in their labor income in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Two-thirds of these workers are informal workers or own-account workers, groups without access to unemployment protection. These household shocks would reduce average per capita income by 7.6 percent, with the largest impact on the second and third quintiles of the income distribution. These income shocks are inequality-increasing: without any mitigation measures, inequality would increase by 4 percent. The country’s first line of defense, its existing unemployment insurance system, reduces the income shock to 5.3 percent. Even so, an additional 8.4 million Brazilians could fall into poverty. The policy responses announced by the government, and particularly the Auxilio Emergencial (AE) transfer, have the potential to fully absorb the labor income shock for the poorest 40 percent and reduce poverty. Yet, these results reflect annualized income, obscuring the sharp reduction in monthly income if demand shocks persist after the AE ends. Looking towards the next phase of the response, considering extensions of AE that are either less generous or more restricted provide a fiscally prudent approach for continuing to support Brazil’s most vulnerable. 2020-08-20T18:59:40Z 2020-08-20T18:59:40Z 2020-07-31 Policy Note http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/883191597258941357/COVID-19-Labor-Market-Shocks-and-Poverty-in-Brazil-A-Microsimulation-Analysis http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34372 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note Latin America & Caribbean Brazil
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
UNEMPLOYMENT
PANDEMIC IMPACT
INFORMAL SECTOR
INEQUALITY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
SOCIAL PROTECTION
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
UNEMPLOYMENT
PANDEMIC IMPACT
INFORMAL SECTOR
INEQUALITY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
SOCIAL PROTECTION
spellingShingle CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
UNEMPLOYMENT
PANDEMIC IMPACT
INFORMAL SECTOR
INEQUALITY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
SOCIAL PROTECTION
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
UNEMPLOYMENT
PANDEMIC IMPACT
INFORMAL SECTOR
INEQUALITY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
SOCIAL PROTECTION
Cereda, Fabio
Rubiao, Rafael M.
Sousa, Liliana D.
COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis
description In this note we estimate the short-term economic impact of the COVID-19 crisis on Brazilian families vis-a-vis labor shocks. The analysis, using a microsimulation model which incorporates subnational shocks from a computable general equilibrium growth model, shows that over 30 million workers in Brazil may see significant reductions in their labor income in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Two-thirds of these workers are informal workers or own-account workers, groups without access to unemployment protection. These household shocks would reduce average per capita income by 7.6 percent, with the largest impact on the second and third quintiles of the income distribution. These income shocks are inequality-increasing: without any mitigation measures, inequality would increase by 4 percent. The country’s first line of defense, its existing unemployment insurance system, reduces the income shock to 5.3 percent. Even so, an additional 8.4 million Brazilians could fall into poverty. The policy responses announced by the government, and particularly the Auxilio Emergencial (AE) transfer, have the potential to fully absorb the labor income shock for the poorest 40 percent and reduce poverty. Yet, these results reflect annualized income, obscuring the sharp reduction in monthly income if demand shocks persist after the AE ends. Looking towards the next phase of the response, considering extensions of AE that are either less generous or more restricted provide a fiscally prudent approach for continuing to support Brazil’s most vulnerable.
format Policy Note
topic_facet CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
UNEMPLOYMENT
PANDEMIC IMPACT
INFORMAL SECTOR
INEQUALITY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
SOCIAL PROTECTION
author Cereda, Fabio
Rubiao, Rafael M.
Sousa, Liliana D.
author_facet Cereda, Fabio
Rubiao, Rafael M.
Sousa, Liliana D.
author_sort Cereda, Fabio
title COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis
title_short COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis
title_full COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis
title_fullStr COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19, Labor Market Shocks, Poverty in Brazil : A Microsimulation Analysis
title_sort covid-19, labor market shocks, poverty in brazil : a microsimulation analysis
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020-07-31
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/883191597258941357/COVID-19-Labor-Market-Shocks-and-Poverty-in-Brazil-A-Microsimulation-Analysis
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34372
work_keys_str_mv AT ceredafabio covid19labormarketshockspovertyinbrazilamicrosimulationanalysis
AT rubiaorafaelm covid19labormarketshockspovertyinbrazilamicrosimulationanalysis
AT sousalilianad covid19labormarketshockspovertyinbrazilamicrosimulationanalysis
_version_ 1756575703631921152