In an all too real a sense, the
coronavirus has forced everyone to grudgingly drop our hubris. Our now-exposed conceit
is that we could straightforwardly surmount any issue we’re facing because of
our richly “cutting edge” technology, science and vast knowledge. Not this time.
Once again Mother Nature has
reminded us, “You are not in control of this situation, I am.” Is it going to
be back to the past echoed by the 1918-20 Spanish Flu one more time? Hopefully
not, but it does have its rhyming parts.
At this point, it seems we have a
choice: Are we going back to the past, or back to the future (admittedly
without Doc Brown’s time-travelling DeLorean)? My hope is that with clear,
systematic planning and proper policies we can head back to the future, albeit a different one than originally planned.
For thousands of years diseases
have challenged our place on Earth. However, for the first time a viral attack is
happening with the modern rendition of widespread personal and national globalization as our standard
operating practice and with social media instantly available to billions of us.
Virtually everyone has followed the
coronavirus’ ruinous voyage ever since it first attacked humanity in Wuhan,
China last December. We’ve tallied its daily destructive path via social media.
And it’s rapidly turned the world upside down – in no small part because of globalized
mass travel and complacent conceit.
Historically, there have been other
journeys that have turned the world upside-down. At the end of the 15th
century, Christopher Columbus discovered a “new world.” It took him 7 ½ months to
present Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, his royal venture capitalists, with
proof of his success. He offered the monarchs as his testimonials; gold, pearls
and aji (South American chili peppers) he had taken from indigenous peoples. For
our current viral journey, we haven’t had to wait until mid-July to learn about
the coronavirus’ presence in China. We learned about it in real-time.
Shown below are some of the
pandemics that have significantly wounded us over a very long time.
PANDEMICS THROUGH THE AGES
Pandemic
|
Date
|
Worldwide Deaths
|
Black Death/Bubonic Plague
|
1331-1353
|
75-200M
|
3rd Bubonic Plague
|
1855
|
10-15M
|
Spanish Flu
|
1918-20
|
50-100M
|
Spanish Flu in the US
|
1918-20
|
675,000
|
Hong Kong Flu
|
1968-69
|
1M
|
Swine Flu
|
2009-10
|
150-500K
|
Typhus
|
1489+
|
11.4M
|
Smallpox*
|
18th C –1979
|
900M
|
Measles
|
500AD+
|
1.3M annually
|
Malaria
|
450AD+
|
2M annually
|
HIV/AIDS
|
1980’s+
|
32M
|
Coronavirus
|
As of 4/20/20+
|
151.0K (US: 36.1K)
|
*The only infectious human disease ever to be completely
eradicated. +Continuing
Sources: Wikipedia and New York Times
The reoccurring Black Death that
probably killed 30% to 60% of Europe's population in the 14th Century wasn’t
the first human pandemic; the coronavirus pandemic won’t be the last. Why?
Because Mother Nature always bats last. Non-flu diseases continue their deadly
routs around the world. Over their long history of human calamity, “ordinary”
diseases like Typhus, Malaria, Yellow Fever, HIV/AIDS and Measles are
responsible for more deaths than any others. Thankfully, only a few of these
ordinary diseases are endemic in the US.
The chart above shows the dates
these pandemics have occurred, from about 15 centuries ago to the present day. Only
in the last century has medical science been able to stifle some of these
diseases’ plunder. The victory over Smallpox is an impressive, singular example.
A strange Black-Death linkage happened this year when many Christian churches around
the world were closed for their April 5th Easter Services. When was the last
time Churches closed en masse on Easter Sunday? During the 14th Century Black
Death.
Perhaps the 1918-20 Spanish Flu is
the most similar pandemic to the current covid-19 virus. They are produced by
two different virus types, but they both caused (or are causing) tremendous
suffering. I have regretted not asking my father, who was then a teenager in
Brooklyn, about his recollections regarding the Spanish Flu medical
catastrophe.
The Spanish Flu occurred during
WWI, when knowledge of viral diseases was yet to be well comprehended, and was unknowingly
carried by thousands of troops in Europe and beyond. One expert estimated that
the Spanish Flu killed 218 out of every 100,000 people living on Earth at the
time. In the US this flu was first noticed at Ft. Riley, Kansas among returning
US Army soldiers.
The US was crippled by this flu
that preyed particularly on young adults (unlike covid-19). The average age of
a 1918 flu victim was 28. Older adults seemed to have some immunity, again unlike
covid-19. The 1918-20 flu was particularly devastating in the high-density,
industrial cities in Eastern US, especially in Pennsylvania. More than 17,500
Philadelphians (my original home town) died of this flu in the first six months
of 1918; magnified by the city’s holding a giant downtown parade on September
29, 1918. About 200,000 people attended the Fourth Liberty Loan Drive parade
that promoted the war effort and public purchases of war bonds. Floats displayed
the latest locally-built additions to America’s arsenal. Within three days,
every bed in Philadelphia’s 31 hospitals was filled with Spanish Flu victims.
This flu struck in three distinct waves. In Philadelphia, the case fatality
rate was a colossal 37%. By the end of this flu’s rampage over 60,000
Pennsylvania residents lost their lives. [At this point, 1,285 Pennsylvanians
have succumbed to covid-19.] Many epidemiologists believe the Spanish Flu is
still with us; over time it has metamorphosed into the seasonal H1N1 flu.
The “novel” characteristics of the
current coronavirus mean we don’t yet have any way of directly alleviating its
damage; mitigation persists as our only means of fighting covid-19. In stark
terms, it’s 6-feet apart or 6-feet under. The frenetic, on-going efforts to
produce a coronavirus vaccine won’t be finished for at least 12-18
months under the best of circumstances. Success is not guaranteed despite our
knowledge and technology. So far, every nation including ours has been fighting
a defensive battle against this virus by attempting to flatten the curve.
Illustrating the global scope of
relevant experience, Liberian Tolbert Nyenswah, who ran one of the most
successful contact tracing efforts in Africa during the 2014-16 Ebola
epidemic, said “All people are talking about right now is hospital beds,
ventilators, testing, testing, testing. Yes, those are important, but they are
all reactive. You are dealing with the symptoms and not the virus itself. You
will never beat a virus like this one unless you get ahead of it. America must
not just flatten the curve but get ahead of the curve.” A growing number of knowledgeable
people have united around a test-trace-quarantine strategy, while we wait,
hopefully, for an effective vaccine. Before a vaccine becomes available maybe
by the end of next year, testing is the most essential tactic for managing the coronavirus.
The initial CDC-designed and
assembled coronavirus test proved unreliable, due to its complexity and mis-fabrication
(which it only admitted later). It failed to follow Occam’s razor with tragic
consequences. The wheels of government always turn slowly: The Administration
once promised that 27M tests would be available by the end of March. After this
disastrous start, only 3.56M tests have been conducted through April 17.
There has been worthy, wide-spread
criticism leveled at #45 and his obsequious associates for not definitively planning
how to combat this coronaviral pandemic. His autarkical approach is doomed. I’m
reminded of a well-known quote from #34, Dwight D. Eisenhower; “Plans are
worthless, but planning is everything.” The current president doesn’t believe
in either planning or plans. He’s an all-too-sterling member of the “Ostrich
Alliance;” world leaders who have kept their heads firmly planted in the sand
with respect to fighting the coronavirus. [FYI: The Ostrich Alliance also
includes President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov of Turkmenistan; say his
name just one time fast.]
We are all suffering because #45’s
viral testing efforts are wholly insufficient. Such efforts are vital for reviving
our comatose economy that he alleges to care about. Apparently, he’s decided to
toss the testing “ball” into the states’ court of already-filled unfunded responsibilities
rather than offer any real leadership or support. His decisions are senseless,
reckless and irresponsible.
The viral policy contest between epidemiologists
and economists has now become more heated. More than 22 million people have
filed for unemployment benefits in the past month, 15% of our labor force. The
coronavirus’ consequent economic turmoil is growing ever-larger. The US labor
market is beyond black & blue. Which has amplified the calls for “opening
up” the economy, that in turn has increased appeals/pleas for additional, much-needed
federal funds for covid-19 and serology (antibody) testing, equipment and
personnel. When is such fiscal relief coming? Astonishingly, the president
hasn’t said. Congress should halt its politicking, and get dollars into the
pockets of suffering people and businesses.
Economists predict the
unemployment rate will rise to at least 15% by May, a level last seen 81 years
ago. A gaggle of GDP forecasts for the second quarter range from dreadful (-8%)
to disastrous (-15%), portraying an abysmal near-term future. Consumer
spending, the single largest part of GDP, is also black & blue and expected to drop at least 14%. Macroeconomic
policies are needed to bring our economy out of its coma. But no one knows when
they should begin, without causing a second wave of deaths.
From an ivory-tower macroeconomic
perspective, the sizeable federal funding that has already been provided, with
more in the offing, is affording a tragic, real-time test of nascent Modern
Monetary Theory (MMT). MMT posits there won’t be much if any inflationary
consequence from the giant, supplementary monetary (and fiscal) policy
expansions that have happened within the last three weeks. Many doubt the
MMTers.
We are all debt-heads now. Every
single dollar of expanded federal, state and local government expenditures that’s
fighting the coronavirus is debt-financed. The federal government is expected
to increase its deficit-financing by $4 trillion (T) dollars this year alone, a
deficit that’s two times as big relative to GDP in any year since WWII ended.
Business’ borrowing is also at record levels, and their credit lines are being depleted.
Over the past decade households’ debt levels have also greatly increased. To counter
this, the Federal Reserve has reduced interest rates to zero and provided more
than $2T in loans to banks.
Total government, business and
household debt is now 224% of our GDP, a worrying all-time high. Macroeconomic
textbooks state in normal times such vastly-increased debt could create
increased inflation and topple our economy’s now fragile house of cards. And,
of course, these are not normal times at all.
The president’s shouts to immediately
“liberate” states from the shackles of Sheltering-in-Place (ShiPing) orders
demonstrate his total inability to properly lead our nation. His path will take
us back to the past.
Economic and other policy-makers who value
peoples’ well-being and public health strongly caution against suddenly stopping
the states’ and localities’ mitigation efforts now, despite the economy’s strong
recessionary drift. They aptly believe using data from broadly increased
testing (at some point) should ultimately foretell when governors can more
safely relax their ShiPing rules, and mitigate another covid-19 resurgence. This
is the path back to the future.
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