The Globe and Mail - 08.04.2020

(WallPaper) #1

WEDNESDAY,APRIL8,2020 | THEGLOBEANDMAIL O A


OPINION


NEWS |

A


t time of writing, Canada
had roughly 18,000 con-
firmed cases of COVID-19.
On its own, this does not tell us
much. Is 18,000 a lot or a little?
Only by comparison with some
other benchmark – with previous
experience, with other countries,
with hospital capacity, with the
population – can we begin to
make sense of it.
Even then, the numbers can be
deceiving. Early in the pandemic,
the relatively small numbers
then reported caused people to
underestimate the threat. Now
that the numbers are starting to
wane, the tendency is to overesti-
mate it.
So it’s worth bearing in mind a
few key points as you scan the


case numbers each day.
One: It’s not where the num-
bers are that matters, so much as
where they’re going. More signif-
icant than the total number of
cases, or even the number of new
cases, is the ratio between them:
the rate of growth. Or more par-
ticularly, the effect of compound-
ing that rate of growth over sev-
eral intervals. A caseload that
looks trivial today can be over-
whelming in a few days.
Two: We are not at a point in
time, but on a curve. Simply com-
paring how many cases each
country has, or even how fast
they are growing, does not tell us
much, as both will depend on
what stage the pandemic is at in
each country. Comparisons are
better made not on a given day,
but at similar numbers of days af-
ter each country’s outbreak
began.
Three: Forecasting models are
only as good as the assumptions
built into them. Simple straight-
line extrapolations of current
growth rates into the future can
produce some truly eye-popping
projections. But much can
change in the interim – particu-
larly human behaviour. Indeed, it
is the point ofcurrentgovern-
ment policy around physical dis-

tancing to change our conduct.
Of course, should behaviour
change asgovernments would
wish, actual outcomes will be less
terrifying than the models had
originally forecast. This is not evi-
dence that the policy was unnec-
essary: Rather, it is evidence that
it worked.

And it is working. In most
countries where the epidemic hit
hardest and earliest, growth rates
have dropped substantially. Only
two weeks ago, the number of re-
ported cases in western Europe,
where the epicentre of the dis-
ease shifted after its initial out-
break in China, was growing by
about 15 per cent a day. By last
week it had dropped to 10 per
cent; it is now at around five.
In Canada, likewise, rates have

fallen over the same period, al-
beit from a higher level: from 25
per cent to 15 per cent to less than
8 per cent. Is that evidence that
we are doing worse at combating
the disease? No. Remember point
two: the virus arrived here two
weeks later than Europe; they’ve
had more time to fall from their
peak. Adjusting for our different
start dates, our numbers, both in
total and as a rate of growth,
compare quite favourably.
I know, I know: case counts are
a highly flawed measure. These
are reported, not actual cases.
They tell us how many people
have tested positive for the dis-
ease, but given how few people
have been tested (about 1 per
cent of Canada’s population) and
how selectively the tests have
been applied (mostly those
showing symptoms), the likeli-
hood is that they underestimate
the actual numbers by a wide
margin.
That makes them imperfect,
yes. It doesn’t make them worth-
less. You just have to interpret
them carefully.
In fact, accounting for how the
number of tests performed af-
fects the number of cases report-
ed actually suggests the situation
is rather better than the reported

numbers show. Because the
number of tests has also been
growing, rapidly – from just less
than 24,000 across Canada on
March 14, to almost 400,000. If
the actual number of cases ex-
ceeds the reported number to-
day, it did so by an even wider
margin in weeks past – which
means the fall in the reported
number likely understates the
fall in the actual number.
In any event, case numbers
turn out to be a reasonable proxy
for the numbers we are more in-
terested in, such as hospitaliza-
tions, ICU occupation and
deaths. These are all growing, fas-
ter than we’d like, but slower
than they were – and slower than
they were projected to. In Onta-
rio, for instance, the number of
COVID-19 patients in ICUs was
projected by the province’s
health department, just last
week, to exceed 750 by now – and
that was the “best case” scenario.
The actual number, as of Tues-
day: 233.
We are not by any means out
of the woods. Nor can we let
down our guard any time soon.
But if you thought things were
hopeless, or the policy wasn’t
working, you’re wrong. It’s
working.

InCanada’svirusdata,areasonforhope


Understandinghow


toreadthenumberof


COVID-19casesreveals


thatphysical-distancing


effortsmaybeworking


ANDREW
COYNE


OPINION
Simplycomparinghow
manycaseseach
countryhas,oreven
howfasttheyare
growing,doesnottell
usmuch,asbothwill
dependonwhatstage
thepandemicisatin
eachcountry.

A


t a Canadian-American
conference in Washington
a year ago, former ambas-
sadors from each side were
weighing in on the prospect of
better trade relations.
The name Peter Navarro, who
is U.S. President Donald Trump’s
trade adviser, came up. It would
help a lot, said Gordon Giffin,
who served as Ottawa ambassa-
dor under former U.S. president
Bill Clinton, if Mr. Navarro was
“sent off to Peru.”
“Not far enough,” piped in
Gary Doer, U.S. envoy under for-
mer prime minister Stephen
Harper. He and Mr. Giffin and
other diplomats had seen too
much of Mr. Navarro’s bomb-
throwing, antediluvian approach
to trade with allies.
The wiry, temperamental 70-
year-old economist is character-
ized by Canadian players on the
bilateral front as an ultraprotec-
tionist whack-job. But rather
than have their wish realized of
seeing him banished, Mr. Navar-
ro has gained stature and influ-
ence.
Along with his major trade re-
sponsibilities, he is a driving
force behind Mr. Trump’s Amer-
ica First policies, and he has re-
cently been appointed policy co-
ordinator for the Defense Pro-
duction Act.
When Mr. Trump reopens his
country, which will likely be
sooner than Prime Minister Jus-
tin Trudeau does his, protection-
ist Navarro will have his ear at
the moment when the interde-
pendent world economy can ill


afford to go in a beggar-thy-
neighbour direction.
With the reopening of the
Canada-U.S. border, former am-
bassador David MacNaughton,
who was in deep disagreement
with Mr. Navarro through much
of his tenure, says there’s an op-
portunity to build on the new
North American Free Trade
Agreement. “U.S. protectionism
vis-à-vis Canada would be a mis-
take for them. Doesn’t mean
they won’t.”
Not with the truculent Mr. Na-
varro at large. His reputation as
Canada’s public enemy No. 1 on
team Trump is well earned. His
most recent hostile act was in us-
ing his new defence authority to

try to prevent 3M from exporting
protective masks to Canada for
its fight against COVID-19. That
issue was resolved Monday fol-
lowing bitter complaints from
the Canadian side.
But there will be other erup-
tions. Mr. Navarro recently draft-
ed an executive order that omi-
nously allows him to use nation-
al-security grounds to limit im-
ports of foreign medicines, raw
materials and vaccines.
This brought to mind a move
that outraged Ottawa a couple of
years ago when he used the
same security rationale to justify
Mr. Trump’s imposing of steel
and aluminum tariffs on Canada.
This was after he’d strongly sided

with Mr. Trump in advocating a
total withdrawal by the U.S. from
NAFTA. Like this President, he
could care less about any historic
special relationship with Canada.
A long-time China hawk, Mr.
Navarro is now embroiled in a
coronavirus controversy.
The New York Times reported
Tuesday that he warned Mr.
Trump in a memorandum as
early as Jan. 29 that COVID-
could devastate the country.
In response, Mr. Trump re-
stricted travel from China two
days later. But he subsequently
played down the virus threat and
said recently that no one could
have predicted its disastrous im-
pact.

No one except, as it turns out,
his good friend Mr. Navarro.
In broadening his turf to
COVID-19, Mr. Navarro got into a
shouting match with Dr. Antho-
ny Fauci, insisting to the Presi-
dent’s expert on infectious dis-
eases that the malaria drug
hydroxychloroquine was a good
way to treat the coronavirus. He
was roundly denounced in the
media for trying to come across
as a medical expert.
The same Mr. Navarro was be-
hind the plan for stationing
troops near the Canadian border,
an idea which has since been dis-
carded. He is the one who went
on Fox News after the 2018
Group of Seven summit in Que-
bec to say of Mr. Trudeau that
“there’s a special place in hell for
any foreign leader that engages
in bad-faith diplomacy with
President Donald J. Trump.”
I met Mr. Navarro way back
when we were at the Kennedy
School at Harvard. He was a
hothead then. He is a hothead
now. But similar to Stephen Mill-
er, the President’s race-baiting
immigration adviser, he’s won
over Mr. Trump by kneeling to
his every word.
His demands for steel and alu-
minum tariffs led to the resigna-
tion of moderate Gary Cohn, Mr.
Trump’s top economic adviser,
who worked well with Canada.
In Bob Woodward’s bookFear,
Mr. Cohn depicts Mr. Navarro as
a rogue actor, saying “He’s the
source of all the chaos in this
building.”
Not all, maybe. But with Cana-
da and other allies, he has
wreaked havoc. Having not been
exiled to Peru or a farther desti-
nation, as the former ambassa-
dors hoped, more of the same
can now be anticipated.

Ottawa’sbiggestTrumplandenemyisontherise


WhiteHousetradeadviserPeterNavarroisseenwithPresidentDonaldTrumpandVice-PresidentMikePence
atanewsconferenceonThursday.DOUGMILLS/THENEWYORKTIMES

LAWRENCE
MARTIN


OPINION

W


hen U.S. President
Donald Trump ordered
3M to stop shipping re-
spirator masks to Canada and
Latin America, reaction across
the political spectrum in this
country was swift.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford
called it unacceptable and a lousy
way to treat “friends.” Saskatche-
wan Premier Scott Moe called it
“nothing short of a betrayal.”
Dwight Ball, Premier of New-
foundland and Labrador, remind-
ed the White House of the pivotal
role that his province, and in par-
ticular the town of Gander, played
in taking care of stranded Amer-
ican airline passengers after the
9/11 attack. Even Alberta Premier
Jason Kenney reminded Mr.
Trump that Canada had made
“very real sacrifices” on behalf of
the U.S. in the global fight against
terrorism.
It was quite a team effort, one


that included premiers not nor-
mally known for jumping to the
defence of Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau, who also criticized Mr.
Trump for requesting 3M aban-
don long-time customers in a
time of peril.
Whether it was the tag-team ef-
fort of the premiers or quiet diplo-
macy by Ottawa, the White House
later rescinded the directive. That
doesn’t mean the end of medical
supply problems – not as long as a
mercurial and often vindictive
President remains in charge.
But Mr. Trump did do one posi-
tive thing: He helped unify Cana-
dian political leaders in this coun-
try’s fight against COVID-19. In
fact, the response to the pandem-
ic here has, for the most part, ush-
ered in a most welcome postparti-
sanship period.
A recent story in the Toronto
Star talked about the friendship
that has blossomed between for-
mer enemies Mr. Ford and federal
Liberal cabinet minister Chrystia
Freeland, who is co-ordinating
the government’s coronavirus re-
sponse with the provinces. Now,
the two talk into the night about

the economic fallout from the
pandemic, referring to each other
as their mutual “therapists.”
This truce between rivals has
become evident at the provincial
level as well. In B.C., onetime Lib-
eral cabinet minister Shirley
Bond, as fierce a critic of the NDP
as you’ll find, recently took to
Twitter to thank Health Minister
Adrian Dix for all his hard work,
and urged him to stay safe and
well. Her hashtag #AllinThisTo-
gether received wide applause
from a public not used to such ge-
nerosity of spirit among political
adversaries. This is a bipartisan
scene being played out by provin-
cial politicians across the country.
This does not mean that there
hasn’t been a time and place for
political parties, especially the
Conservative opposition in Otta-
wa, to demand accountability and
transparency inthe government’s
pandemic response. This particu-
larly pertains to the enormous
amounts of money being spent to
help get Canadians through this.
But overall, our politicians have
shed their partisan robes for the
time being, knowing that in the

war we are fighting, we are all on
the same side.
One appreciates this even
more when looking at what is
happening in the U.S., where the
President has picked fights with
those stategovernorswho have
not shown enough appreciation
for whatever help Washington
might be sending their way. The
U.S. in many ways remains as di-
vided as ever, even while the
country tries to fight a common
enemy.
This has led to a fractured re-
sponse to the pandemic, with
some states taking the matter ex-
tremely seriously, while others,
especially in the Republican
south, have been slower to enact
social-distancing measures, if at
all. Any hopes that there might be
a reprieve in the holy war be-
tween the country’s two main po-
litical parties vanished the mo-
ment Mr. Trump blamed the
Democrats for, initially, perpetu-
ating the coronavirus “hoax” and
later for not leaving the country in
very good shape to fight it.
Those Canadians brave
enough to follow what is happen-

ing south of the border doubtless-
ly feel even more fortunate to live
where they do, to witness in real
time what political leadership
looks like amid a global calamity.
No, not every move our gov-
ernments have made have been
perfect. There have been mis-
takes, to be sure. But more often
than not, they have been honest
ones. And thankfully when
they’ve been made, we have not
seen the kind of finger-pointing
that has surfaced in the U.S. – a
phenomenonthat only serves to
make a nervous populace even
more angry and on edge.
In an unparalleled crisis, peo-
ple want their leaders working to-
gether, not at odds with one
another.
We have no idea how long this
public-health emergency will last.
And there will undoubtedly come
a time when politics will look and
sound a lot like it used to.
But there is also a good chance
that some of the antagonism we
are used to seeing will disappear.
Because after you’ve been
through a war with someone,
you’re bonded with them for life.

DonaldTrumphashelpedunifyCanadaamidtheCOVID-19pandemic


GARY
MASON


OPINION
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