In this article
in the Guardian I lay out what the optimal strategy for handling
COVID-19 should be for a country like the UK. How does the Prime
Minister’s statement on Sunday evening compare to that strategy?
The key to relaxing
a lockdown is having a test, trace and isolate infrastructure in
place, and very low infection levels. We do not have either. So why
was Johnson talking to the nation on Sunday?
He set out a general
framework for relaxing the lockdown, all conditional on some function
of infection levels and R. (He didn’t specify what the function
was.) To set out an approach makes sense. To not tell anyone what
exactly the conditions for relaxation are does not make sense, but it
gives him flexibility to make it up as he goes along (or “follow
the science” as he likes to call it).
In addition he
relaxed some of the rules for what people can do outdoors. Those in
holiday hotspots are not too happy, and just don’t try driving to
Wales. What may prove to be more important, he changed the
government’s mantra from ‘stay at home’ to ‘stay alert’.
The problem was, apparently, that ‘stay at home’ was too
effective. Everyone with any sense agrees that ‘stay alert’ is
vacuous. Why was ‘stay at home’ too successful? The answer seems
to be that some people who the government thinks should have been
working were staying at home at the government’s expense.
Which leads us to
the most controversial element in what he said. Those who couldn’t
work at home should be working. They should try and maintain social
distancing at work, and when getting to work, where possible.
What happens when social distancing isn’t possible. We use “good
solid British common sense”, according to Mr. Johnson. I guess
those using some other country’s common sense might come to
different conclusions.
This is an important
easing of the lockdown, and one which is going to put some more
workers in harm’s way. As Johnson said:
“work from home if you can, but you should go to work if you can’t
work from home “. There was no qualification to that instruction,
no “but only if it is safe to do so” at the end. This chimes with
talk from the Treasury of too many people being furloughed, and
mooted plans to reduce how much furloughed workers are paid in the
future.
It is not workers
who choose to be furloughed, but firms who furlough them. Sunday’s
message was encouraging them to go back to work, even though they
cannot ensure social distancing at work. If you think I’m being
alarmist, how about an industry where working has sometimes to break
social distancing. Like removers (try moving a metre long chest of
drawers staying two metres apart) where previously the governing body
had advised its members it was not safe to do business. Here is what
the British Association of Removers now say:
“It is clear from the change of emphasis in the PM’s message of Sunday 10th May, that many industries are being encouraged to return to work, but only on the basis of it being unviable for them to work from home AND now having the ability to comply with the stipulated social distancing measures. Following its meeting this morning, the position of the Board of Directors of the BAR is therefore to suggest that a cautious approach to returning to operational activity may now be possible, although it remains the case in our industry that we are unable to comply fully with the social distancing measures outlined by the Government, and our Members must therefore take all appropriate measures to mitigate any associated risks.”
In addition there is the issue of the safety of getting to work if
you do not have a car.
Johnson’s “good solid British common sense” is about observing
social distancing under all circumstances, unless you are at work. I
would suggest this is not common sense at all. It is significantly
increasing the risk of transmitting the virus, at a time when the
test, trace and isolate infrastructure is not in place, and infection
levels are still high. If you don’t believe me, read
what most scientists think. It is moving too soon in order to save
the Treasury some money in the short term.
I say short term because in the longer term this will cost HMT more.
It will surely raise R, which will delay the time when virus numbers
come down enough for most people to feel safe interacting with
others. Only then can the economic recovery begin in earnest. As I
said in the Guardian article, the quickest way to restart the economy
is to get the virus under control so infection levels are very low.
This is classic Treasury short term penny pinching with a longer term
economic cost.
Starmer in his broadcast put this clearly:
"We needed to hear that nobody would be asked to go to work or send their children to school without it being safe to do so."
That clarity was absent from Johnson’s statement on Sunday, and I
suspect deliberately so. Martin Fletcher describes the Prime
Minister’s rationale well here:
“Caught between those cabinet hawks and party donors who want to reopen the economy as fast as possible, and the doves who stress the need to save lives, Johnson has produced a muddled compromise that has pleased neither camp.”
This is miles away from how a government should relax a
lockdown.
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