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Title: Covid-19: Testing Inequality in New York City

Author(s): Stephanie Schmitt-Grohé, Ken Teoh and Martin Uribe

Publication Date: April 2020

Keyword(s): Coronavirus, Covid-19 testing, Gini coefficient, health, income distribution, inequality and Lorenz curves

Programme Area(s): Macroeconomics and Growth and Public Economics

Abstract: Motivated by reports in the media suggesting unequal access to Covid-19 testing across incomes, we analyze zip-code level data on the number of Covid-19 tests, test results, and income per capita in New York City. We find that the number of tests administered is evenly distributed across income levels. In particular, the test distribution across income levels is significantly more egalitarian than the distribution of income itself: The ten percent of the city's population living in the richest zip codes received 11 percent of the Covid-19 tests and 29 percent of the city's income. The ten percent of the city's population living in the poorest zip codes received 10 percent of the tests but only 4 percent of the city's income. At the same time, we find significant disparity in the fraction of tests that come back negative for the Covid-19 disease across income levels: moving from the poorest zip codes to the richest zip codes is associated with an increase in the fraction of negative Covid-19 test results from 38 to 65 percent.

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Bibliographic Reference

Schmitt-Grohé, S, Teoh, K and Uribe, M. 2020. 'Covid-19: Testing Inequality in New York City'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=14673