TY - BOOK AU - Bank,The World TI - Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic: Short- and Medium-Term Estimates for West Africa SN - 9781464804229 AV - QR201.E16 -- .E26 2014eb U1 - 614.57 PY - 2014/// CY - Washington PB - World Bank Publications KW - Ebola virus disease -- Economic aspects -- Africa, West KW - Epidemics -- Economic aspects -- Africa, West KW - Public health -- Economic aspects -- Africa, West KW - Electronic books N1 - Front Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Executive Summary -- 1. Introduction -- Overview -- Channels of Impact -- Structure of the Report -- 2. Short-Term Effects and Fiscal Impacts -- Introduction -- Liberia -- Sierra Leone -- Guinea -- Neighboring Economies -- Conclusion -- 3. Medium-Term Impacts -- Methods of Estimation -- Scenarios of the Ebola Epidemic -- Estimates of the Impact of Ebola -- Conclusion -- 4. Concluding Remarks -- Containing the Epidemic -- Fiscal Support -- Restoring Investor Confidence -- Strengthening the Surveillance, Detection, and Treatment Capacity of African Health Systems -- Appendices -- A. Sector Decomposition of GDP -- B. Estimating the Expected Economic Impact across West Africa -- C. Modeling the Economic Impact on West Africa -- Introduction -- Methodology -- Capturing the Economic Impact of Ebola -- D. Modeling the Economic Impact on Liberia -- Scenario Assumptions -- Simulation Results -- Notes -- References -- Box -- Figures -- Tables -- Back Cover N2 - Beyond its terrible toll in human lives and suffering, the Ebola epidemic has inflicted a measurable economic impact on West Africa in terms of forgone output, higher fiscal deficits, rising prices, lower real household incomes, and greater poverty. This impact results partly from the health-care costs and forgone productivity associated with being infected, but it is driven principally by the efforts of the uninfected population to avoid exposure ('aversion behavior'). The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic: Short- and Medium-Term Estimates for West Africa provides a mixed methods analysis of the economic impact, combining theory on the channels of economic impact of the epidemic, economic indicators across sectors in the affected countries, and models of how these economies interact with each other and with the broader world. The result is a quantification of the potential overall magnitude of the economic impact for Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, as well as for West Africa as a whole. Ebola's short-term economic impact (2014) in the three core countries is on the order of US359 million in forgone output: That is how much poorer these economies will be than they would have been in the absence of Ebola. Two alternative scenarios are used to estimate the medium-term impact (2015): A Low Ebola scenario corresponds to rapid containment within the three most severely affected countries and limited regional contagion, and a High Ebola scenario corresponds to slower containment in the three core countries with broader regional contagion. The estimates of the output lost as a result of the epidemic in the three core countries for 2015 alone sum to US97 million under the Low Ebola scenario (implying some recovery from 2014) and US809 million under the High Ebola scenario. Over the medium term, however, epidemiological and economic contagion; are likely in the broader sub-region of West Africa. This report uses a multi-country general equilibrium model to estimate the medium-term impact on output for West Africa as a whole. Under the Low Ebola scenario, the loss in GDP for the sub-region is estimated to be US2.2 billion in 2014 and US1.6 billion in 2015. Under the High Ebola scenario, the estimates are US7.4 billion in 2014 and US25.2 billion in 2015. These are major regional impacts with global implications. This report will be of particular interest to policy makers and others interested in understanding the broader impact of the Ebola epidemic and in assisting with the subsequent economic recovery UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/orpp/detail.action?docID=1903364 ER -