JonDouglas
Senior Member
- Location
- New England
There is An National Bureau Of Economic Research working paper entitled STATEWIDE REOPENING DURING MASS VACCINATION:EVIDENCE ON MOBILITY, PUBLIC HEALTH AND ECONOMIC ACTIVITY FROM TEXAS. The paper has substantive references and data. Below is a snippet from the conclusions.
Texas became the first state to entirely repeal its central NPIs — in-person capacity constraints on business and a mask-wearing mandate in public spaces — following their 30 implementation in 2020. We document that the Texas reopening had, at most, a small effect on stay-at-home behavior and had no impact on foot traffic at restaurants, bars, retail establishments, entertainment venues, business services, personal care services, or grocery stores. We also find no evidence of increased COVID-19 case growth following the reopening, consistent with (i) this being a period of mass vaccination, and (ii) the reopening having little impact on net social mobility. These null results generally persisted among more urbanized and less urbanized counties, as well as counties that supported Donald Trump or Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election. Finally, we fail to detect evidence that the reopening affected short-run state-level employment, as measured by UI claims filed, the overall state unemployment rate, and the employment-to-population ratio. Together, this study’s findings suggest that the predictions of reopening advocates and opponents failed to materialize. The policy appears to have had little impact on social mobility, COVID-19 spread, or on short-run economic activity