BACKGROUND
The COVID-19 lockdowns led to significant resource constraints, potentially impacting mental health and decision-making behaviors. Understanding the psychological and behavioral consequences could inform designing interventions to mitigate the negative impacts of episodic scarcity during crises like pandemics.
OBJECTIVE
To investigate the effects of perceived scarcity on mental health (stress and fear), cognitive functioning, time and risk preferences (present bias and risk aversion), and trade-offs between groceries, health, and temptation goods during and after the COVID-19 lockdown in Shanghai.
METHODS
A quasi-natural experiment was conducted in Shanghai during and after the COVID-19 lockdown. Online surveys were administered in May 2022 (during lockdown) and September 2022 (post-lockdown). Propensity Score Matching (PSM) was used to balance demographic factors between the groups (During: n=332; After: n=339). Data were analyzed using regression analyses, controlling for potential confounders.
RESULTS
Perceived scarcity was significantly higher during the lockdown (mean=7.97) than after (mean=4.35; P<.001). Higher perceived scarcity was associated with increased stress levels both during (β=0.62, P<.001) and after the lockdown (β=0.65, P<.001). While cognitive functioning remained stable, possibly due to a ceiling effect from high education levels, monetary risk aversion increased under prolonged scarcity during lockdown (interaction β=4.68, P<.001). During lockdown, participants allocated more budget to groceries (β=0.67, P=.01) and less to health items (β=-0.61, P=.02).
CONCLUSIONS
The study highlights that perceived scarcity during lockdown intensified stress and altered decision-making behaviors, including increased monetary risk aversion and shifts in spending priorities. Theoretically, this study advances the understanding of perceived scarcity by exploring its domain-specific effects on mental health and decision-making. Practically, these findings emphasize the need for public health strategies that mitigate the psychological impact of scarcity during crises, ensure access to essential goods, and support adaptive decision-making behaviors.