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Remote Work and the Heterogeneous Impact of COVID-19 on Employment and Health
93
Citations
7
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
Respiratory HealthHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthCovid-19 EpidemiologyWorker HealthCovid-19Public HealthRemote WorkHealth WorkforceJob LossesGlobal Health CrisisCovid-19 PandemicHealth EquityRemote WorkersEpidemiologyHealth EconomicsWorkplace Health SurveillanceGlobal HealthHeterogeneous ImpactMedicineSocial Distancing
This paper examines the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on employment and respiratory health for remote workers (i.e.those who can work from home) and non-remote workers in the United States.Using a large, nationally-representative, high-frequency panel dataset from March through July of 2020, we show that job losses were up to three times as large for non-remote workers.This gap is larger than the differential job losses for women, African Americans, Hispanics, or workers without college degrees.Non-remote workers also experienced relatively worse respiratory health, which likely occurred because it was more difficult for non-remote workers to protect themselves.Grouping workers by pre-pandemic household income shows that job losses and, to a lesser extent, health losses were highest among non-remote workers from low-income households, exacerbating existing disparities.Finally, we show that lifting nonessential business closures did not substantially increase employment.
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