SARS struck Taiwan in 2003, causing a national crisis. Many people feared that SARS would spread through the health care system, and outpatient visits fell by more than 30% in the course of a few weeks. We examine how both public information and the behavior and opinions of peers contributed to this reaction. We identify a peer effect through a difference-in-difference comparison of longtime residents and recent arrivals, who are less socially connected. Although several forms of social interaction may contribute to this pattern, social learning is a plausible explanation for our finding. We find that people respond to both public information and to their peers. In a dynamic simulation based on the regressions, social interactions substantially magnify the response to SARS.
Learning during a crisis: The SARS epidemic in Taiwan
Daniel Bennett,Chun-Fang Chiang,A. Malani
Published 2014 in Journal of Development Economics
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- Publication year
2014
- Venue
Journal of Development Economics
- Publication date
2014-10-13
- Fields of study
Sociology, Business, Medicine, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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