From pandemics to poverty: the implications of coronavirus for the furthest behind

Author(s)
Diwakar, V.
Date published
10 Mar 2020
Type
Blogs
Keywords
Epidemics & pandemics, Health, Poverty
Organisations
ODI

When risk and uncertainty affects the wealthy, the welfare of vulnerable people may be neglected. Recent suggestions by health agencies that people should stay at home if they’re feeling unwell or begin to stockpile food in response to the coronavirus outbreak may be well-intentioned guidance, but it may also fail to take into account the most vulnerable groups of society.

Guidance to date is of limited use to people without adequate safety nets. Workers in the informal economy may not have the luxury of staying at home without paid sick leave. People living in or near poverty often lack disposable cash and cannot easily stockpile food. Hunger, malnutrition, pneumonia and other forms of health-related shocks and stresses compound vulnerability to the virus and contribute to a vicious cycle of disease, destitution and death. Poverty can fuel contagion, but contagion can also create or deepen impoverishment.

The virus will be another source of impoverishment and reinforce existing factors, in turn limiting the ability of vulnerable households to escape from – and stay out of – poverty.