Browsing by Author "Munizaga, Marcela"
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- ItemAnalyzing the Determinants of Teleworking during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Chile(2024) Astroza, Sebastian; Hurtubia, Ricardo; Tirachini, Alejandro; Guevara, C. Angelo; Carrasco, Juan Antonio; Salas, Patricio; Munizaga, MarcelaThe COVID-19 pandemic triggered an unprecedented increase in telework, a trend expected to have lasting effects on the labor market and commuting patterns, including location preferences. Understanding the demand for telework is critical to face the challenges that may come in present and future scenarios with hybrid work arrangements. In this paper, a model for the probability of telework is proposed and estimated with data collected during two different periods of the COVID-19 pandemic, in 2020, in Chile. The model measures the correlation between several socioeconomic characteristics, and latent variables related to concerns about health and the economy, with the probability of teleworking. We find that low-income workers are less likely to telework, and that females are more likely to work from home. Latent variables also played a relevant role at the beginning of the pandemic: a greater concern about health issues increased the probability of teleworking. In comparison, a greater concern about the economic effects of the pandemic had the opposite impact. However, these effects shifted 10 weeks into the pandemic, when a total lockdown was imposed in the largest city. The implications of our findings for both policy and research after the pandemic are discussed.
- ItemMobility Changes, Teleworking, and Remote Communication during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Chile(2020) Astroza, Sebastián; Tirachini, Alejandro ; Hurtubia Gonzalez, Ricardo Daniel; Carrasco, Juan Antonio; Guevara, Angelo; Munizaga, Marcela; Figueroa, Macarena; Torres, ValentinaResults from a mobility survey from Chile during the COVID-19 pandemic show a decrease of 44% of trips in Santiago, with metro (55%), ride-hailing (51%), and bus (45%) presenting the highest reduction. Modes with the lowest reduction are motorcycle (28%), auto (34%), and walking (39%). While 77% of workers from low-income households had to go out and work, 80% of workers from high-income households worked from home. Other important factors that correlate with teleworking are gender, educational level, employment status, and occupation. Regarding the number of trips for purposes other than work, significant factors are gender, age, and employment status.
- ItemUsing Disaggregated and Latent Variable Analysis to Investigate the Role of Socioeconomic Factors in Concerns and Expectations Related to the Covid-19 Pandemic in Chile(2022) Tirachini, Alejandro; Guevara, Angelo; Munizaga, Marcela; Carrasco, Juan Antonio; Astroza, Sebastián; Hurtubia González, RicardoThe COVID-19 pandemic has triggered a complex set of psychosocial effects, such as anxiety, depression, financial loss, burnout, and fear of infection. We study the role of socioeconomic factors in the concerns related to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the expectations of social changes on a post-pandemic future. The analysis is performed by collecting 22 indicators from a sample of 4,395 adults in Chile. The analysis is performed first by descriptive statistics, then by fusing the indictors into three latent variables, and finally by modelling each indicator as a separate choice. We find that lower-income people are significantly more worried about a range of financial and health issues arising from the COVID-19 pandemic, including concerns about being infected by the virus, losing their job and not being able to pay debts. The concern about facing a large economic crisis is significantly larger in the extremes, i.e., for low- and high-income groups. Age, gender, having a university degree, the possibility of working from home, and the general health status also influence the fears related to the COVID-19 pandemic. From a policy point of view, we conclude that strong policy interventions are necessary to reduce the uneven negative effects of COVID-19 in society, including material and mental health problems. From a methodological point of view, our results show that, while using a latent variable approach allows disentangling the main drivers of the phenomenon, rich content may be omitted when a disaggregated analysis is neglected, therefore both approaches are complementary.