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School of Economics Coronavirus Research

3 June 2021

The School of Economics has established a Coronavirus Hub to collect research and commentary by colleagues on the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Our Research

Over the last twelve months many colleagues from the School of Economics have turned their attention to the impact of the pandemic on areas such as education, gender equality, prices and inflation, employment and incomes, and the UK regions. They have communicated their work to a wide range of audiences, through academic articles, briefings, webinars, podcasts, press and broadcast media. In response, the School has established a Coronavirus Hub to make this research easily accessible.

Among the research undertaken, Simon Burgess and Hans Henrik Sievertsen have worked on both the impact of lost and disrupted learning as a result of school closures and the policy response. In August 2020, Simon was co-author of the interdisciplinary DELVE group’s Royal Society report:  Balancing the Risks of Pupils Returning to Schools which received considerable attention from policy-makers and the press. Simon continues to work on the effects of lost learning and has been active in discussions around the education recovery programme with senior officials in the Department for Education. 

Babak Somekh was co-lead author on an ImpactEd report Lockdown Lessons: pupil learning and wellbeing during the COVID-19 pandemic drawing on data from around 60,000 pupils aged 6-18 across England over a seven-month period. Key findings include insights on pupil wellbeing and the unequal impact of remote learning on children from disadvantaged backgrounds. This research has been produced to support schools in their immediate response to the pandemic and in longer-term strategic planning to mitigate its effects.  

Monica Costa Dias, who joined Bristol in Autumn 2020 has looked at inequalities in children's experiences of home learning during the COVID‐19 lockdown in England and the impacts of the COVID‐19 crisis on inequalities including employment and earning potential, family life and health.  She has contributed oral evidence on the gendered economic impact of COVID-19 for the Women and Equalities House of Commons Committee. Monica has also studied potential labour market policy responses to the challenges likely to be faced during the recovery period.

Communicating Our Research  

Economics Observatory 

Richard Davies, Professor in the Public Understanding of Economics, leads the Economics Observatory, which we welcomed to the School in September. Funded by the ESRC, the Observatory is a collective initiative by the economics research community to answer questions about the economics of the COVID-19 crisis and the recovery. The Observatory addresses policy-makers, the media, the public, students and teachers who are interested in the economics of COVID-19 and the implications for households, organisations and public policy. Other members of the team include Sarah Smith as a lead editor and Simon Burgess on the editorial board. Since the site went live in May 2020, colleagues at Bristol have contributed articles on the impact of the pandemic on education in universities and schools, on regional inequality and on women. In total, our articles have received over 8,500 views including two pieces created by current School of Economics students.

CEPS 

The Centre for Evidence-based Public Services (CEPS) also receives funding from the ESRC and is based in the School of Economics. It is led by Helen Simpson and is home to a team firmly focused on research with policy impact, conducting data-intensive work on a variety of public services and economic policy issues, from health, education and welfare to transport and the environment. In December the Centre produced the pandemic edition of Evidence, its new magazine. It featured articles on the effects of the COVID-19 crisis on jobs and on the next generations, both those currently in education and those not even born yet. 

Alongside these key resources, academics in the School have also reached policy-makers and the public through other means. Simon Burgess has been interviewed about his research on learning loss by the BBCTalk Radio and CNN International. Richard Davies was invited to talk to Times Radio about the budget and policies to address the huge government debt accrued during the pandemic. Sarah Smith has spoken to VoxEu Podcasts and the Daily Mail’s Femail podcast about her research on the impact on gender inequality. For International Women’s Week (March 2021), Sarah guest-edited for the Economics Observatory, commissioning a series of articles focussing on the impact of the crisis on women. Simon Burgess and Helen Simpson both contributed to the Royal Economic Society COVID-19 webinar series. 

The pandemic has taken a terrible toll, but its health and economic impacts, and the huge disruption it has caused does provide us with a unique opportunity to challenge the way we manage our society and economy. It provides a once in a lifetime chance to reassess and to hopefully build back better. Once the recovery begins, economics research will continue to provide the tools and the evidence to shape this crucial discussion and our colleagues will continue to be a part of the conversation.

 

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