The Short-Term Impact of Covid-19 on Labor Markets, Poverty and Inequality in Brazil

37 Pages Posted: 25 May 2021

See all articles by Diala Al Masri

Diala Al Masri

Independent

Valentina Flamini

International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Frederik Toscani

International Monetary Fund

Date Written: March 1, 2021

Abstract

We document the short-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the Brazilian labor market focusing on employment, wages and hours worked using the nationally representative household surveys PNAD-Continua and PNAD COVID. Sectors most susceptible to the shock because they are more contact-intensive and less teleworkable, such as construction, domestic services and hospitality, suffered large job losses and reductions in hours. Given low income workers experienced the largest decline in earnings, extreme poverty and the Gini coefficient based on labor income increased by around 9.2 and 5 percentage points, respectively, due to the immediate shock. The government’s broad based, temporary Emergency Aid transfer program more than offset the labor income losses for the bottom four deciles, however, such that poverty relative to the pre-COVID baseline fell. At a cost of around 4 percent of GDP in 2020 such support is not fiscally sustainable beyond the short-term and ended in late 2020. The challenge will be to avoid a sharp increase in poverty and inequality if the labor market does not pick up sufficiently fast in 2021.

JEL Classification: D31, E24, H50, H53, J40, I12, J20, J64, E25

Suggested Citation

Masri, Diala Al and Flamini, Valentina and Toscani, Frederik, The Short-Term Impact of Covid-19 on Labor Markets, Poverty and Inequality in Brazil (March 1, 2021). IMF Working Paper No. 2021/066, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3852790

Valentina Flamini

International Monetary Fund (IMF) ( email )

700 19th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20431
United States

Frederik Toscani

International Monetary Fund ( email )

700 19th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20431
United States

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
282
Abstract Views
776
Rank
216,271
PlumX Metrics