Voting in the 2020 Italian constitutional referendum led to more COVID-19 cases in Italy, study finds

The Surrey team analysed weekly Covid-19 infections across Italy (at the municipality level) before and after the September poll and found that a 1 per cent increase in turnout amounted to an average of a 1.1 per cent increase in post-election infections.

Dr Giuseppe Moscelli, co-author of the study and Reader of Economics at the University of Surrey, said:

“With the recent political turmoil in Italy culminating with the end of Mario Draghi’s government, it is important to reflect on the past two and a half years, which have been an immensely tragic period for all of Italy.

“The 2020 referendum came as the world was dealing with the unprecedented threat of Covid-19, and our model shows that something as fundamental as casting a vote can come at a cost.”

Along with saving approximately 23,000 lives, Surrey’s researchers found that delaying the 2021 Italian general election saved the country €362 million in additional hospital costs for patients that would have been admitted to inpatient care and Intensive Care Units.

Dr Marco Mello, co-author of the study and a Research Fellow at the University of Surrey, added:

“The decision whether to postpone an election or a general referendum due to a pandemic event poses a clear trade-off between human lives and health on the one hand, and political rights on the other hand. With our research, we propose an economic framework for such an important evaluation to be undertaken in similar future situations.”

The research has been published in the Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization

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