Khan, Amjad MuhammadPark, HogeunRoberts, MarkWibisana, Putu Sanjiwacika2022-09-222022-09-222022-09https://hdl.handle.net/10986/38047This paper uses high-frequency nighttime time lights data to estimate the impacts of the Covid-19 crisis on economic activity during the first year of the pandemic for a global sample of 2,800 cities, covering a total population of 2.5 billion people. Activity is found to be negatively affected by both the spread of the virus and the imposition of nonpharmaceutical interventions, but the negative impacts of the spread are large compared to those of nonpharmaceutical interventions. Large differences in city trajectories are also observed. Cities in low- and middle-income countries faced a significantly larger overall loss of economic activity compared to those in high-income countries. Additionally, cities with higher population densities are found to be more resilient in the face of the global shock as compared to less dense ones, but this difference is only observed in low- and middle-income countries. Taken together, the findings suggest that the Covid-19 crisis gave rise to divergence in urban economic trajectories, both across and within countries.enCC BY 3.0 IGOCOVID-19 ECONOMIC LOSSNIGHTTME LIGHTS DATAESTIMATED GLOBAL PANDEMIC IMPACTNONPHARMACEUTICAL COVID INTERVENTIONURBAN RESILIENCEGLOBAL URBAN COVID IMPACTHEALTH-PRESERVING BEHAVIORHIGH-DENSITY URBAN RESILIENCEWhen the Lights Go OutWorking PaperWorld BankThe Economic Impacts of Covid-19 on Cities Globally10.1596/1813-9450-10189