Abstract

Think tanks and political leaders have raised concerns about the implications that the Covid-19 response and reconstruction might have on other social objectives that were setting the international agenda before the Covid-19 pandemic. We present evidence for eight consecutive weeks during April–May 2020 for Austria, testing the extent to which Covid-19 concerns substitute other social concerns such as the climate crisis or the protection of vulnerable sectors of the society. We measure behavior in a simple donation task where participants receive €3 that they can distribute between themselves and a list of charitable organizations, which vary between treatments. We consider initially a list of eight charities, including a broad set of social concerns. Results show that introducing the WHO Covid-19 Solidarity Response Fund significantly reduces the sum of donations to the original eight charities. This derives from two effects: First, introducing the Covid-19 Solidarity Response Fund does not significantly change aggregate donations. Second, results point to a high support to the WHO Covid-19 Fund. Overall, our results indicate that donations to diverse social concerns are partially substituted by donations to the Covid-19 fund; yet, this substitution does not fully replace all other social concerns. Results are robust to a 10-fold increase in endowment, with decisions made over €30.

Highlights

  • The Covid-19 pandemic is a dramatic event: As of August 25th, 2021, there are more than 212 million confirmed cases worldwide with over 4 million confirmed deaths due to the disease (see the Statistics by the World Health Organization (WHO), https://bit.ly/3gRoK9w)

  • Introducing the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund for WHO significantly reduces the sum of donations to other social causes

  • The results of this study are consistent with a partial substitution in donations to other social causes after the emergence of the Covid-19 pandemic

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Summary

Introduction

The Covid-19 pandemic is a dramatic event: As of August 25th, 2021, there are more than 212 million confirmed cases worldwide with over 4 million confirmed deaths due to the disease (see the Statistics by the World Health Organization (WHO), https://bit.ly/3gRoK9w). Waste management, climate mitigation, reducing plastic in oceans or reforestation are some of the calls for action included in this program These illustrate the relevance of the over­ arching pre-Covid-19 social objective of fighting the climate crises and promoting environmental conservation and the interrelation with other social objectives. Faust et al (2018) demonstrate that the highest risk of disease spill-over exists at intermediate levels of habitat loss, while the rarest and largest ep­ idemics occur at extreme rates of land loss This is alarming, given that recent estimates suggest that only about 3% of terrestrial surface qualify as fully intact ecosystems (Plumptre et al, 2021). Investments to reduce the current rates of deforestation (e.g. through payments for ecosystem services) would likely result in large returns, even if only considering the reduced likelihood of future virus emergence (Dobson et al, 2020)

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