Abstract
Infectious diseases and pandemics, including the COVID-19 pandemic, have a huge economic impact on cities. However, few studies examine the economic resilience of small-scale regions within cities. Thus, this study derives neighborhoods with high economic resilience in a pandemic situation and reveals their urban characteristics. It evaluates economic resilience by analyzing changes in the amount of credit card payments in the neighborhood and classifying the types of neighborhoods therefrom. The study conducted the ANOVA, Kruskal–Wallis, and post hoc tests to analyze the difference in urban characteristics between neighborhood types. Accordingly, three neighborhood types emerged from the analysis: high-resilient neighborhood, low-resilient neighborhood, and neighborhood that benefited from the pandemic. The high-resilient neighborhood is a low-density residential area where many elderly people live. Neighborhoods that benefited are residential areas mainly located in high-density apartments where many families of parents and children live. The low-resilient neighborhood is an area with many young people and small households, many studio-type small houses, and a high degree of land-use mix.
Highlights
The line graph shows the amount of card payment in Suwon, and the bar graph shows the number of new COVID-19 cases
It is possible to check the characteristics of the HRN and benefited neighborhood (BFN) in a pandemic
Regarding land-use, it is situated between the low-resilient neighborhood (LRN) and BFN
Summary
Cases exceeded 100 million, and the number of deaths exceeded 2.3 million [1]. The damage caused by COVID-19 is global, with its effect especially being felt in large cities. In Korea, as of 26 January 2021, cases in the Seoul Metropolitan Area accounted for 61.2% of all cases [3] In large cities, both the number of infected people and fatalities are high. This study focuses on the economic impact of COVID-19 on cities. The COVID-19 pandemic is ongoing, some studies examine its economic impact. Studies on the economic impact of COVID-19 reported that city revenue, income, tourism, and small- and medium-sized businesses were significantly affected [18]. Economic impacts from infectious diseases, such as the decline in consumption, are not the same regionally [18,29]. This study derived high economic resilient neighborhoods in the Covid-19 pandemic and analyzed the urban characteristics of these neighborhoods
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