Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Title: GDP Effects of Pandemics: A Historical Perspective Author-Name: Maciej StefaƄski Abstract: The paper estimates dynamic effects of pandemics on GDP per capita with local projections, controlling for the effects of wars and weather conditions, using a novel dataset that covers 33 countries and stretches back to the 13th century. Pandemics are found to have prolonged and highly statistically significant effects on GDP per capita - a pandemic killing 1% of the population tends to increase GDP per capita by approx. 0.3% after about 20 years. The results are qualitatively robust to various model specifications, geographical division of the sample and an exclusion of extreme events such as the Black Death and the New World epidemics. The effects of pandemics differ from those of wars and weather, which are negative and die out quicker, in line with the neoclassical growth model. Number: 2020-057 Length: 38 pages Creation-Date: 2020-12 Keywords: pandemic, GDP, local projection, economic history, war, tree rings Classification-JEL: I15, N10, N30, N40, N50, O47 File-URL: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12182/1111 File-Format: Application/pdf DOI: 10.33119/kaewps2020057 Handle: RePEc:sgh:kaewps:2020057