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Articles

Gender, Mobility, and Covid-19: The Case of Belgium

 

ABSTRACT

Studies have shown that women are disadvantaged when facing infectious disease outbreaks. This study uses descriptive data analysis, causality, and VAR modeling to verify this hypothesis in the case of COVID-19 in Belgium in relation to people’s mobility. The results confirm this women’s disadvantage hypothesis, in particular among the working-age population in Belgium. This disadvantage is explained by women’s greater mobility during the pandemic. Despite the restrictions on nonessential travel imposed by Belgian authorities, women use public transportation more often than men to travel for work and family reasons and are thus more likely to be exposed to the virus. Therefore, it is necessary that the health, economic, and social response provided by the Belgian authorities correct this inequality.

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Belgium has a larger share of women with confirmed COVID-19 cases than most countries.

  • Women are a large proportion of the country’s essential and frontline workers.

  • Women’s use of public transportation during lockdown to fulfill responsibilities increased their exposure to the virus.

  • The measures to combat COVID-19 in Belgium must correct the inequalities caused by the pandemic to women’s detriment.

  • Belgian women should join the health, economic, and social response against the pandemic to prevent future health crises.

JEL CODES:

SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1080/13545701.2020.1832240.

Notes

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Giscard Assoumou Ella

Giscard Assoumou Ella holds a PhD in economics from the University of Toulon in France. He has expertise in macroeconomics modeling, forecasting, and policymaking, political economics of development, and applied econometrics. Currently, he is Professor of Economics at Omar Bongo University, researcher at CIREGED (Centre International de Recherches en Économie et Gestion pour le Développement), and associate researcher at LEAD (Laboratoire d’Économie Appliquée au Développement), University of Toulon. He works in the areas of economic and econometric modeling applied to economic and financial stability, and economic development in Africa. His papers have been published in international journals including African Development Review, Economics Bulletin, Journal of Central Banking Theory and Practice, and Theoretical and Applied Economics.

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