The Economist USA 03.21.2020

(avery) #1
Whiplash
Covid-19,atMarch18th 2020

Sources:JohnsHopkinsCSSE;UN;OECD;
nationalgovernments;DatastreamfromRefinitiv

*Latest †2018orlatest ‡2020estimate
§Restaurantslimitedhours **Totalreturn

Numberofcases
doubleseveryday

...everysecondday ...everythirdday

...everyweek

Logscale

S.Korea Italy France Germany Spain Britain
Dateof100thcase Feb20th Feb23rd Feb29th Mar1st Mar2nd Mar5th
Totalnumberofcases
Casesper
100,000population
Numbertested*
Per1mpopulation
Hospitalbeds†
Per1,000inhabitants
Medianage,years‡ 43.7 47.3 42.3 45.7 44.9 40.
Pub/bar/rest.closures N o Ye s Ye s Ye s § Ye s N o
Stockmarkets
Mar1st-18th,%decrease

100,

10,

1,

100

Britain

Spain

SouthKorea

Italy

Germany

France

8,413 35,713 9,043 12,327 13,910 2,
16.3 60.4 13.8 14.9 29.9 3.

3 68 33

-19.9 -31.2 -29.3 -29.0** -28.1 -22.

5,567 2,514 168 249

12

Stopped
updating
testnumbers

Not
announced

252321191715131197531 28

Confirmedcases,selectedcountries

1

Dayssince100thcase

holduntilApril,andthehiatusislikelyto
bea lotlonger.Thissummer’sinternation-
alEuro 2020 tournamenthasbeenputoff
until2021 (ashastheCopaAmérica,which
wastotakeplaceinColombiaandArgenti-
na).TheGlastonburyfestivalhasbeencan-
celled;sowillmuchofthesummerbe.
Notallthestepsbeingimposedarewell
supported by evidence. Size limits on
smallergatherings—Austria,whichisim-
posingsomeofthestrongestrules,wants
nomore than five peopletogether at a
time—are open to question. Anastasia
PharrisoftheEuropeanCentreforDisease
PreventionandControl,theeu’spublic-
healthagency,sayssheknowsofnodata
supportingspecificcut-offsforgathering-
sizewithregardstocovid-19transmission.
Politiciansalsoseemmuchkeeneron
banninginternationaltravelthanepide-
miologistsare.TheWorldHealthOrganisa-
tiondoesnotrecommendbroadinterna-
tionaltravelrestrictions,ortheclosureof
borders. ButonMarch17ththeeubanned
non-essentialtravelinto theblocfor 30

days(seeEurope)—atthesametimethat
othercountries, fromIndia to America,
have bannednon-citizens arriving from
the eu. Experts agree cordonssanitaires
aroundwholeregionswillmakenodiffer-
encetotheepidemicsinindividualcoun-
triesatthispoint.
Perhapsthemostinterestingareaofdi-
vergence has been school closures. For
continentalcountries, theywere among
thefirstcontrolstobeputinplace,asthey
havebeenworldwide (seeInternational).It
wasnotuntilMarch18ththatfirstWales,
thenScotlandandfinallyEnglandsaidthey
wouldclosetheirs,too.

BecarefulofGrandma
Howusefulthiswillbewillvaryfromplace
toplace.Schoolclosuresmakemostsense
insocietieswhereoldpeoplespenda lotof
timewithchildrenandyoungpeopleand
disruptingthosetiesishard.Italy,where
abouttwo-thirdsofadultsaged18-35live
withtheirparents,andmanyhousescon-
tainthreegenerations,isa caseinpoint.At

thesametime,closingschoolsmeanspar-
entshavetofindsomeoneelsetolookafter
theirchildrenordoitthemselves.In 2009
researchersattheBrookings Institution,
anAmerican think-tank, estimated that
closingschoolsandnurseriesfora month
wouldcostAmericasomewherebetween
0.1%and0.3%ofgdp. Andiftheparent
worksin healthcare, thelosses willbe
morethanfinancial.TheBrookingspaper
estimated thatbetween 6% and 19% of
health-careworkerswouldhavetostayat
homeduringa schoolclosure;theEnglish
closuresallowforthechildrenofhealth-
careworkerstocontinuetogotoschool.
Thereisalsothequestionofwhentoin-
troduce such closures. In the Imperial
modellingtheclosureofschoolsanduni-
versitieshasa prompt,ifnotoverwhelm-
ing,effect.Buttheyalsohaveadelayed
cost.Thisisbecauseoftheeffecttheyhave
onthesecondwaveofthedisease.
Interventionswhichsuppressthere-
productionnumbersavea lotoflives.But
theydonotmakethepopulationimmune
tothedisease.Soifyourelaxtheinterven-
tions,thuslettingthedisease’sreproduc-
tionnumberrisebackup,itwillpromptly
setaboutinfectingthelargepoolofpeople
it missedthefirsttimeround.
ThemodelfromImperialshowedthis
well-knowneffectinaction.Afteritsfive
monthsofrestrictionswerebroughttoa
close,a secondwavestartedtobuildinlate
autumn.Whenthemodelwasrunwith
schoolsanduniversities closeddownat
thebeginningof thefirstoutbreak,this
secondwavewasconsiderablyworse,be-
causeimmunitybuiltupthroughinfec-
tion-in-the-course-of-education was ab-
sent(seechart2 onnextpage).
Concernsabouta secondwaveareone
ofthereasonsthatgovernmentscannotre-
assurecitizensoverjusthowlongthedis-
ruptiontonormallifewillcontinue,in-
steadbandyingabout “the timebeings”
and“comingweeksandmonths”.Feware
asopenastheRobertKochInstitute,a Ger-
mangovernmenthealthagency,insaying
that,in extremis, tough restrictions may
needtoremaininplaceuntila vaccinecan
bemade,testedandputintouse—aperiod
it seesaslastinguptotwoyears.
Even if governments were forthright
abouthowlongtheyexpectedtheirimpo-
sitionstolast,itisnotclearthatthedeci-
sionwillbetheirstomake.Infreesocieties
thedurationwill,inpractice,dependon
howcompliant peopleare,andfor how
long.TheteamatImperialreckonsthat,if
theirmeasuresaretoshowthedesiredre-
sults,compliancewitheachofthosemea-
suresmustbeatleast50-75%.Intheearly
daysthatmaybepossible:thechastened
andfinedFrenchwillnotbeoutinthe
samenumbersoverthecomingweekend
astheywereoverthepreviousone.Andas
hospitalsstart tofillandthenoverflow,

The EconomistMarch 21st 2020 BriefingThe pandemic 17

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