Testing, Voluntary Social Distancing, and the Spread of an Infection
References
- (2016) Network security and contagion. J. Econom. Theory 166:536–585.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2017a) Microeconomic origins of macroeconomic tail risks. Amer. Econom. Rev. 107(1):54–108.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2021) Optimal targeted lockdowns in a multigroup SIR model. Amer. Econom. Rev.: Insights 3(4):487–502.Google Scholar
- (2017b) Privacy-constrained network formation. Games Econom. Behav. 105:255–275.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2021) A simple planning problem for COVID-19 lock-down, testing, and tracing. Amer. Econom. Rev.: Insights 3(3):367–382.Google Scholar
- (2020) What will be the economic impact of covid-19 in the us? Rough estimates of disease scenarios. NBER Working Paper No. 26867, https://www.nber.org/papers/w26867.Google Scholar
- (2000) A noncooperative model of network formation. Econometrica 68(5):1181–1229.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2013) Social factors in epidemiology. Science 342(6154):47–49.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) An seir infectious disease model with testing and conditional quarantine. Preprint, submitted March 26, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3561142.Google Scholar
- (2022) Bail-ins and bail-outs: Incentives, connectivity, and systemic stability. J. Political Econom. 130(7):1805–1859.Google Scholar
- (2022) Controlling epidemic spread: Reducing economic losses with targeted closures. Management Sci. 68(5):3175–3195.Google Scholar
- (2013) Network formation in the presence of contagious risk. ACM Trans. Econom. Comput. 1(2):1–20.Google Scholar
- (2001) Random Graphs (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK).Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) An economic model of the covid-19 epidemic: The importance of testing and age-specific policies. Preprint, submitted June 5, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3618840.Google Scholar
- (2020) To end the coronavirus crisis we need widespread testing, experts say. Accessed March 24, 2020, https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/03/24/820157519/to-end-the-coronavirus-crisis-we-need-widespread-testing-experts-say.Google Scholar
- (2020) To suppress Covid-19, we need to test those with no symptoms. Accessed April 26, 2020, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/26/opinion/coronavirus-test-asymptomatic.html.Google Scholar
- (2011) Social interactions and spillovers. Games Econom. Behav. 72(2):339–360.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2016) Systemic risk, policies, and data needs. Optimization Challenges in Complex, Networked and Risky Systems, 185–206.Google Scholar
- (1984) Automobile safety regulation and offsetting behavior: Some new empirical estimates. Amer. Econom. Rev. 74(2):328–331.Google Scholar
- (2009) An economic model of friendship: Homophily, minorities, and segregation. Econometrica 77(4):1003–1045.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Virus dynamics with behavioral responses. Preprint, submitted. Accessed April 30, 2020, https://arxiv.org/abs/2004.14533.Google Scholar
- (2020) Testing alone is insufficient. Preprint, submitted. Accessed April 30, 2020, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3593974.Google Scholar
- (2010) Epidemics and Rumours in Complex Networks (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK).Google Scholar
- (2021) Demand control of information products: Why perfect tests may not be worth waiting for. Management Sci. 67(11):6678–6693.Google Scholar
- (2017) When is a network epidemic hard to eliminate? Math. Oper. Res. 42(1):1–14.Link, Google Scholar
- (2021) The macroeconomics of epidemics. Rev. Financial Stud. 34(11):5149–5187.Google Scholar
- (2014) Financial networks and contagion. Amer. Econom. Rev. 104(10):3115–3153.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2021) Optimal test allocation. J. Econom. Theory 193:105236.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Modeling the dynamics of the covid-19 population in Australia: A probabilistic analysis. PLoS One 15(10):e0240153.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2021) Internal and external effects of social distancing in a pandemic. J. Econom. Theory 196:105293.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Economics in the Age of COVID-19 (MIT Press, Cambridge, MA).Google Scholar
- (2022) The economic consequences of r= 1: Toward a workable behavioural epidemiological model of pandemics. Rev. Econom. Anal. 14(1):3–25.Google Scholar
- (2020) Health vs. wealth: On the distributional effects of controlling a pandemic. Preprint, submitted August 18, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3583489.Google Scholar
- (1993) Sustainable Communication Networks (Econometric Institute, Erasmus University, Rotterdam).Google Scholar
- (2008) Social and Economic Networks (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ).Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1996) A strategic model of social and economic networks. J. Econom. Theory 71(1):44–74.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2021) Optimal mitigation policies in a pandemic: Social distancing and working from home. Rev. Financial Stud. 34(11):5188–5223.Google Scholar
- (2020) Containing 2019-ncov (Wuhan) coronavirus. Health Care Management Sci. 23(3):311–314.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Adaptive targeted infectious disease testing. Oxford Rev. Econom. Policy 36:S77–S93.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1994) Highway safety, economic behavior, and driving environment. Amer. Econom. Rev. 84(3):684–693.Google Scholar
- (2015) Maximizing the spread of influence through a social network. Theory Comput. 11(4):105–147.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Optimal control of an epidemic through social distancing. Preprint, submitted June 4, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3583186.Google Scholar
- (2006) HIV breakthroughs and risky sexual behavior. Quart. J. Econom. 121(3):1063–1102.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2018) Individual preventive social distancing during an epidemic may have negative population-level outcomes. J. Royal Soc. Interface 15(145):20180296.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1980) The effects of traffic safety regulation in sweden. J. Political Econom. 88(2):412–427.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2020) Determinants of social distancing and economic activity during covid-19: A global view. Preprint, submitted May 14, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3599572.Google Scholar
- (2020) Diffusion in random networks: Impact of degree distribution. Oper. Res. 68(6):1722–1741.Link, Google Scholar
- (2020) Economic epidemiology in the wake of Covid-19. Economics 82120:122900.Google Scholar
- (2000) Contagion. Rev. Econom. Stud. 67(1):57–78.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2001) Random graphs with arbitrary degree distributions and their applications. Phys. Rev. E 64(2):026118.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1975) The effects of automobile safety regulation. J. Political Econom. 83(4):677–725.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2000) Economic epidemiology and infectious diseases. Handbook Health Econom. 1:1761–1799.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1993) Private Choices and Public Health: The AIDS Epidemic in an Economic Perspective (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA).Google Scholar
- (2022) Optimal covid-19 quarantine and testing policies. Econom. J. 132(647):2534–2562.Google Scholar
- (2020) Mass testing is the only sustainable solution to the Coronavirus. https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/03/23/mass-testing-is-only-sustainable-solution/.Google Scholar
- (2009) Selfish drug allocation for containing an international influenza pandemic at the onset. Oper. Res. 57(6):1320–1332.Link, Google Scholar
- (2007) Network formation games and the potential function method. Nisan N, Roughgarden T, Tardos E, Vazirani V, eds. Algorithmic Game Theory, chapter 19 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK), 487–516.Google Scholar
- (2020) Equilibrium Social Distancing (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK).Google Scholar
- (2007) Complex Social Networks (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK).Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2009) Decentralized resource allocation to control an epidemic: A game theoretic approach. Math. Biosci. 222(1):1–12.Crossref, Google Scholar

