Abstract

AbstractWe investigate gender differences across multiple dimensions after 3 months of the first UK lockdown of March 2020, using an online sample of approximately 1,500 Prolific respondents’ residents in the UK. We find that women's mental health was worse than men along the four metrics we collected data on, that women were more concerned about getting and spreading the virus, and that women perceived the virus as more prevalent and lethal than men did. Women were also more likely to expect a new lockdown or virus outbreak by the end of 2020, and were more pessimistic about the contemporaneous and future state of the UK economy, as measured by their forecasted contemporaneous and future unemployment rates. We also show that between earlier in 2020 before the outbreak of the Coronavirus pandemic and June 2020, women had increased childcare and housework more than men. Neither the gender gaps in COVID-19-related health and economic concerns nor the gender gaps in the increase in hours of childcare and housework can be accounted for by a rich set of control variables. Instead, we find that the gender gap in mental health can be partially accounted for by the difference in COVID-19-related health concerns between men and women.

Highlights

  • We collected primary data on mental health, COVID-19-related health and economic concerns, time allocation to market and household production, protective behaviors and donations via an online survey of 1,500 Prolific respondents in the UK to study gender differences in COVID-19 times

  • We find that the gender gap in mental health can be partially accounted for by the gap in COVID-19-related health concerns between men and women, but not by differences in economic concerns due to the pandemic

  • We investigate gender gaps in perceptions, concerns, and expectations regarding health risks and economic concerns related to COVID-19

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Summary

Introduction

We collected primary data on mental health, COVID-19-related health and economic concerns, time allocation to market and household production, protective behaviors and donations via an online survey of 1,500 Prolific respondents in the UK to study gender differences in COVID-19 times. The COVID-19 pandemic is likely to affect people’s donations because of both (a) changes in government policy and (b) changes in uncertainty about future health/ economic outcomes (Scharf, 2020) In this regard, we find that women donated to food banks 5 out of 50 pence (31% or 0.31 SD) more than men. We find that the gender gap in mental health can be partially accounted for by the gap in COVID-19-related health concerns between men and women, but not by differences in economic concerns due to the pandemic.

Collected dataset
Comparison with other datasets
Average characteristics of BIDCOFU respondents
Wellbeing: mental and physical health
Expectations about COVID-19: health risks and economic concerns
Accounting for the “adjusted” gender gaps
A: Standard controls
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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