The
major reason we have one of the highest death rates as a result of
the coronavirus pandemic is that Johnson/Cummings had an intense
aversion to imposing a lockdown, and an unusual disregard for human
life. Any decent politician, after being told at the end of February
that 500,000 of their citizens might die, would have moved heaven and
earth to stop that happening. Anyone watching the recent Despatches
documentary
would have heard about scientists worrying about how to stop the
pandemic, with little pressure from politicians to do so. It may have
been an ultimatum from French president Macron that finally forced
Johnson/Cummings to enact a full lockdown on March 23rd.
Unfortunately
the same factors that delayed a lockdown have led Johnson/Cummings to
relax the lockdown too early, when the number of infections was still
pretty high. This is partly because in the circles that
Johnson/Cummings move, the recession that the pandemic has created is
associated with the lockdown rather than the pandemic. Free the
economy by ending the lockdown, they cry. Some practice what they
preach, in the sense that they ignore
the lockdown rules. One of these people was Cummings himself,
which is the second reason why the UK lockdown is being relaxed too
quickly.
This
is a tragic error, not just because it will lead to yet more deaths
but also because it will delay any economic recovery. As I explained
in a Guardian article,
any recovery will be severely limited if new infections per day
remain high. While we often focus on the irresponsible minority, the
majority of people are cautious, and do not want to risk catching the
virus. They are going to stay away from shops as much as possible,
and will certainly not go back to pubs and restaurants, or public
transport if they are able to avoid it.
The
idea that there is a trade-off between protecting the economy and
protecting people’s health is not only wrong, it is also dangerous. It encourages politicians to relax the lockdown too early,
which risks reducing the speed at which the number of new infections
fall, or even stabilising infection rates at too high a level. Below
is data for the number of COVID-19 admissions to hospital, that is
shown in the government’s daily briefing.
It
is probably the best indirect measure we have for the path of new
infections over time, with a lag of 2-3 weeks. (The problem with data
on the number of people tested is that it depends on how easy it is
to get tested, which has varied greatly over time.) This seems
reasonably consistent with the Cambridge/PHE Joint Modelling Team’s
estimates
that currently there are around 17,000 new infections every day.
The
worrying aspect of this data is that it seems to be levelling off,
which is another way of saying that R is getting close to 1. This
also accords with Cambridge/PHE Joint Modelling Team’s estimates of
regional R values. They note “There is some evidence that Rt has
risen in all regions and we believe that this is probably due to
increasing mobility and mixing between households and in public and
workplace settings”.
All
this is important not because we might see ‘a second peak’.
It is important because it means that the number of new infections is
declining very slowly, which in turn means that most people will not
return to previous patterns of ‘social consumption’. That in turn
means that there cannot be a complete recovery. We do not know at
what level of daily infections people will be happy to resume social
consumption, but it is bound to be well below 17,000. The difference
between R=0.8 and R=0.9 in getting to that much lower number of
infections is measured in months, as is the difference between R=0.9
and R=0.95. We are relaxing lockdown at much higher levels for daily
new infections compared to Italy, France and Germany.
Relaxing
the lockdown might (I stress might) be justified if there was a tried
and tested alternative mechanism to suppress R. That mechanism does
exist: a well functioning and comprehensive track, trace and isolate
(TTI) infrastructure. Yet the government still attempts to gaslight
journalists with a launch of the new Serco led, “world beating”
TTI regime at the beginning of June, that we now learn
will not be fully operational until September or October. Quite how
Serco sold that to ministers/Cummings we can only guess. Scaling up
existing local authority teams would have been both quicker and more
effective, but is contrary to this government’s ideology and the
interests of those who fund it.
It
seems clear that many/most of the scientists advising the government
also think lockdown is ending too quickly. The alert level remains at
4, despite Johnson/Cummings’ wishes. As Rafael Behr put
it,
“Johnson's relationship with science has gone the way of most of
his relationships.” Yet
this divergence does not seem to worry him and those around him at
all, which is a bit odd for a government that kept claiming they were
following the science.
I
should resist the temptation to suggest that all this is obvious.
When I modeled the economic impact of a pandemic I was surprised at
how much of aggregate consumption was social. It isn’t just pubs,
restaurants and tourism, but large parts of recreation, culture and
transport. These sectors make up over a third of consumption. Even the demand for clothing may decline if there are no
parties to go to. The pandemic creates a huge demand shock even
without any lockdown measures like school closures.
That
is why many better-off households have been saving much
more
during the pandemic. The certain way to get a recovery is to release
those savings, by creating the conditions for social consumption to
resume. That in turn means getting daily infections down
substantially by
not relaxing the lockdown too soon. As the Faculty of Public Health
writes
“Like everyone else we are longing for restrictions on our lives to
be lifted. But evidence from around the globe shows that the way to
achieve this is not to merely suppress covid-19, but to
systematically reduce its incidence.”
In
other words there is no trade-off between public health and the
economy: better public health (less COVID-19 infections) is the sure
way to a substantial recovery. The idea that we have to lift the
lockdown for the sake of the economy is the new austerity. With
austerity it was about how we had to get the deficit down, in order
to have a sound economy. Now it is that we have to end the lockdown,
in order to free the economy. In both cases it was the opposite of the truth. In both
cases lives were unnecessarily lost. In both cases the recovery was
blunted.
Could
we get a similar recovery by some other means, such as a large fiscal
stimulus? The short answer is no. Because social consumption is such
a large proportion of the total, you would need a ridiculously large
increase in spending in other sectors even to come close to
substituting for that loss. The only reason why you would contemplate
not doing the first best option, getting infections down, is because
your ideology is screwing your common sense. Which is a pretty good
description of how this government has dealt with this pandemic so
far.
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