Working Paper

Covid-19 Vaccination: The Role of Crisis Experience

Klaus Gründler, Armin Hackenberger, Anina Harter, Niklas Potrafke
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9096

We propose that crisis experience influences preferences towards Covid-19 vaccination and the speed of vaccination during the initial phase when vaccines became available. We use macro and micro data to empirically investigate our theory and introduce a novel crisis experience index. Evidence based on macro data shows that a one-standard-deviation increase in our new crisis experience index gives rise to around 10 additional administered vaccine doses per 100 citizens (around one standard deviation). Our micro-level analysis provides evidence for a microfoundation of the macro-level results, indicating that the crisis history of countries is positively correlated with preferences towards Covid-19 vaccination. Disentangling socialization effects and experience effects, we find that citizens who have experienced crises during their impressionable years (ages 18–25) have stronger preferences for being vaccinated against Covid-19 than others.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Behavioural Economics
Schlagwörter: Covid-19 vaccination, crisis experience, crisis management, experience effects
JEL Klassifikation: H120, H510, I120, I150, I180