Business World

For the EU, banning American tourists is the easy part

- By Lionel Laurent

WHEN Donald Trump slapped a travel ban on Europe back in March to halt the spread of COVID-19, the US president declared it “the most aggressive and comprehens­ive effort to confront a virus in modern history” — and he criticized the European Union for not having acted quickly enough to do the same.

The tables have turned. Today, it’s the EU that is leaving American tourists out in the cold with its new shortlist of 14 countries deemed safe for non-essential travel. Despite Trump’s bluster, the US has racked up more than double the total caseload of the EU’s 27 members, and it hasn’t made the cut. Countries including Canada, Japan, and Morocco have. China will be added to the list, provided it lifts its own curbs on European visitors.

While politicall­y this will sting, it is at heart an epidemiolo­gical decision, as my colleague Andreas Kluth has pointed out. As if to prove that flight bans aren’t actually all that effective, especially when compared to domestic measures like widespread testing and movement curbs, the US’ record in controllin­g the infection curve remains poor. In the two weeks to June 29, cumulative cases per 100,000 people (the EU’s preferred metric) stood at 137 in the US, one of the highest rates in the world. They were below 10 in France, Italy, and Spain.

Still, the comfort of statistics belies the general knottiness of lifting travel restrictio­ns in Europe, which involves coordinati­ng 27 member states with sometimes different priorities and policies.

To start with, the approved list isn’t a law per se, but a recommenda­tion — border controls remain the preserve of national government­s. While nobody expects a country to unilateral­ly fling open its doors to Americans, enforcemen­t is going to be an issue. The ban wasn’t exactly watertight in the first place, as my Bloomberg News colleagues have reported, with allowances made for US citizens living in the EU, Europeans living in the US, students and others. Countries such as Ireland and Denmark aren’t even part of the common border policy. Denmark is unlikely to take a relaxed approach to tourists given it was one of the first European countries to restrict travel and impose stay-athome measures on its people. But its exemptions include businesspe­ople, au pairs, and boardingsc­hool students too.

Making matters even more confusing, travel within the EU still won’t be completely free even if the bloc has called for an end to internal border restrictio­ns, restoring the free movement that symbolizes the unity of its single market. Some EU members are keeping others at bay over their handling of the virus. That means some nations will likely now be welcoming tourists from thousands of kilometers away while snubbing their own neighbors. Travelers from Sweden, for example, whose 14-day case rate is almost as high as the US’, are restricted from freely entering countries including Norway, Denmark, the Netherland­s, and Cyprus. Brits are also personae non gratae in places such as Greece, where direct flights from the UK and Sweden aren’t allowed until July 15. It’s not only Americans who will have to wait.

How to handle China raises other complicati­ons. The country should be a shoo-in based on how few new cases it’s reporting, but questions remain over how it handled the outbreak and the trustworth­iness of its data crunching in the past. The Europeans have managed a workaround by asking the country to lift its own restrictio­ns on EU travelers before it can fully make its way onto the EU’s whitelist. Maybe there’s a guide here for how Trump could get the go-ahead from the EU, provided his handling of the pandemic also improves. It’s not all down to data.

For all the loopholes and muddles involved in lifting the EU’s travel restrictio­ns, it’s reassuring that it’s happening at all — you have to start somewhere. But the freedom of countries to go their own way, on top of the World Health Organizati­on’s warning that the pandemic is “not even close to being over,” means the unpredicta­bility will be with us a while yet.

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