Rollout of COVID-19 Booster Vaccines Associated With Rising Excess Mortality in New Zealand

 

New zealand map hi-res stock ...

John Gibson (jkgibson@waikato.ac.nz)

Working Papers in Economics from University of Waikato

Abstract: The rollout of booster doses of COVID-19 vaccines to the general population is controversial. The ratio of vaccine risk to benefits likely has swung more towards risk than during the original randomized trials, due to dose-dependent adverse events and to fixation of immune responses on a variant no longer circulating, yet the evidence underpinning mass use of boosters is weaker than was the evidence for the original vaccine rollout. In light of an unsatisfactory risk-evidence situation, aggregate weekly data on excess mortality in New Zealand are used here to study the impacts of rolling out booster doses. Instrumental variables estimates using a plausible source of exogenous variation in the rate of booster dose rollout indicate 16 excess deaths per 100,000 booster doses, totaling over 400 excess deaths from New Zealand’s booster rollout to date. The value of statistical life of these excess deaths is over $1.6 billion. The age groups most likely to use boosters had 7-10 percentage point rises in excess mortality rates as boosters were rolled out while the age group that is mostly too young for boosters saw no rise in excess mortality.

Keywords: Covid-19; excess mortality; instrumental variables; vaccines; New Zealand (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D61 I18 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 16 pages
Date: 2022-06-28
References: Add references at CitEc
Citations: Track citations by RSS feed

Downloads: (external link)
https://repec.its.waikato.ac.nz/wai/econwp/2211.pdf (Full paper)

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 15, 2022 11:48
No comments have been added yet.


The Most Revolutionary Act

Stuart Jeanne Bramhall
Uncensored updates on world affairs, economics, the environment and medicine.
Follow Stuart Jeanne Bramhall's blog with rss.