The Economic Impact of the 2014 Ebola Epidemic : Short and Medium Term Estimates for Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone

The 2014 outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease in West Africa has taken a horrible human toll. Although the outbreak originated in rural Guinea, it has hit hardest in Liberia and Sierra Leone, in part because it has reached urban areas in these two countries, a factor that distinguishes this outbreak from previous episodes elsewhere. As of September 10, 2014, there had been 2,281 recorded deaths out of 4,614 suspected or confirmed cases of Ebola. Experts fear that the true numbers may be two to four times larger, due to underreporting. Misery and suffering have been intense, especially in Liberia where doctors have had to turning patients away for lack of space in Ebola treatment centers. Inevitably, before the outbreak is contained the human impacts will increase considerably over these numbers. Epidemiological estimates are acknowledged as highly uncertain and are not the subject of this note. What is certain is that limiting the human cost will require significant financial resources and a concerted partnership between international partners and the affected countries. Particularly in Liberia and Sierra Leone, government capacity is already overrun and the epidemic is impacting macroeconomic activity and budgetary resources. This note informs the response to the epidemic by estimating these macroeconomic and fiscal effects. Any such exercise is necessarily highly imprecise due to limited data and many uncertain factors, but it is still necessary in order to plan the economic assistance that must accompany the immediate humanitarian response. The goal is to help affected countries to recover and return to the robust economic growth they had experienced until the offset of this crisis.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2014-09-17
Subjects:ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES, ADVERSE EFFECT, ADVERSE EFFECTS, AGED, AGRICULTURAL GROWTH, AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AGRICULTURE, AIRPORT, AIRPORTS, AVIAN INFLUENZA, BARS, BEER, BEVERAGES, BORDER TRAFFIC, BOTTLED WATER, BOTTLENECKS, BREWERY, CANDLES, CAPITAL FLIGHT, CASSAVA, CENTRAL BANK, COCOA, CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY, CONSUMER PRICE INDEX, CONTAGION, CONTAINERS, CROSSINGS, DEMAND FOR FOOD, DIESEL, DISEASE, DISEASE OUTBREAKS, DISEASE SURVEILLANCE, DISEASES, DOMESTIC TRANSPORT, DOMESTIC TRAVEL, EBOLA, EBOLA VIRUS, ECONOMIC FORECASTING, ECONOMIC IMPACT, ECONOMIC RISK, ECONOMIC SECTORS, EDIBLE OILS, EMERGENCY MEASURES, EMERGENCY RESPONSE, EMERGENCY TREATMENT, EPIDEMIC, EPIDEMICS, EXCHANGE RATES, EXPORTS, FAMILIES, FOOD IMPORTS, FOOD INSECURITY, FOOD PRICES, FOOD PRODUCTION, FOOD RATIONS, FOOD SECURITY, FOOD STAPLES, FOOD STOCKS, FOODS, FORECASTS, FRUIT, FUEL, FUEL PRICES, GDP, GROWTH RATE, HAZARD, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH SERVICES, HEALTH WORKERS, HOSPITALS, INFECTION, INFLATION, INFLUENZA, INFLUENZA CONTROL, INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, INTERNATIONAL TRANSPORT, INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL, IRON, ISOLATION, LEADING INDICATORS, MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY, MALNUTRITION, MARKETING, MIGRATION, MOBILITY, MORBIDITY, MORTALITY, NURSES, NUTRITION, OILS & FATS, PALM OIL, PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS, PASSENGERS, PATIENTS, PER CAPITA INCOME, PLASTICS, PRICE INCREASES, PUBLIC HEALTH, REAL GDP, RESTAURANTS, RICE, ROAD, ROOMS, RUBBER, SAFETY, SOFT DRINKS, SPILLOVER IMPACTS, TAX, TAX REVENUE, TAXIS, TOLL, TOTAL REVENUE, TRAFFIC, TRANSIT, TRANSIT TRADE, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT SECTOR, TRANSPORTATION, TRAVELERS, TREATMENT, TRUE, VICTIMS, WFP, WHEAT, WORKERS, WORLD FOOD PROGRAM,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/09/20214465/economic-impact-2014-ebola-epidemic-short-medium-term-estimates-guinea-liberia-sierra-leone
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20218
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