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Abstract

Modern levels of global travel have intensified the risk of new infectious diseases becoming pandemics. Particularly at risk are developing countries whose health systems may be less well equipped to detect quickly and respond effectively to the importation of new infectious diseases. This paper examines what might have been the economic consequences if the 2014 West African Ebola epidemic had been imported to certain Asia-Pacific countries. The post-importation estimations were carried out with two linked models: a stochastic disease transmission (SEIR) model and a quarterly version of the multi-country GTAP model, GTAP-Q. The SEIR model provided daily estimates of the number of persons in various disease states. For each intervention strategy the stochastic disease model was run 500 times to obtain the probability distribution of disease outcomes. Typical daily country outcomes for both controlled and uncontrolled outbreaks under 5 alternative intervention strategies were converted to quarterly disease-state results, which in turn were used in the estimation of GTAP-Q shocks to health costs and labour productivity during the outbreak, and permanent reductions in the country’s population and labour force due to mortality. Estimated behavioural consequences (severe reductions in international tourism and crowd-avoidance) formed further shocks. The GTAP-Q simulations revealed very large economic costs associated with uncontrolled Ebola outbreaks, and considerable economic costs for controlled outbreaks in those countries with significant tourism industries. A major finding was that purely reactive strategies had virtually no effect on preventing uncontrolled outbreaks, but pre-emptive strategies substantially reduced the proportion of uncontrolled outbreaks, and in turn the economic and social costs.

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