Gulf News

‘Remote’ vs ‘exposed’

People facing the greatest dangers will have a big say

- BY BRET STEPHENS Bret Stephens is an American journalist, ■ editor and columnist.

In February 2016 Peggy Noonan wrote a prescient column in The Wall Street Journal, in which she made the distinctio­n between two classes of people: The “protected” — that is, the well-off, the connected, the comfortabl­y insulated — and the “unprotecte­d” — everyone else.

“The protected make public policy,” she wrote. “The unprotecte­d live in it. The unprotecte­d are starting to push back, powerfully.” Her larger point, unfathomab­le to so many people at the time (including me), was that Donald Trump was going to win [the US election].

Updated for the pandemic, another word for protected might be “Remote.” A recent study by Jonathan Dingel and Brent Neiman of the University of Chicago found that 37 per cent of jobs in the US can be performed from home. The Remote are, disproport­ionately, knowledge workers, mostly well-educated, generally well-paid. Their profession­al networks, and many of their personal ones, too, are with people who also work remotely.

That leaves the other roughly two-thirds. Call them “Exposed.” They include everyone — shop owner, waiter, cab driver, sales associate, factory worker, nanny, flight attendant, and so on — for whom physical presence is a job requiremen­t. They are, typically, less well-educated, less wellpaid.

For the Remote, the lockdowns of the past two months have been stressful. For the Exposed, they have been catastroph­ic. For the Remote, another few weeks of lockdown is an irritant. For the Exposed, whose jobs are disappeari­ng by the millions every week, it is a terror. For the Remote, Covid-19 is grave new risk. For the Exposed, it’s one of several. For the Remote, an image on the news of cars forming long lines at food banks is disconcert­ing. For the Exposed, that image is — or may very soon be — the rear bumper in front of you.

The 2020 [US] election will hinge on who decisively wins the vote of the Exposed.

Lockdown factor

The Democratic case is that nothing matters more right now than saving the public from Covid-19. Hence the preference for prolonging the lockdowns until the virus is somehow contained. The Republican case is that nothing matters more than saving the public from the effects of the response to Covid-19. Hence the preference for lifting the lockdowns sooner than may be medically advisable.

For now, Democrats seem to have gotten the better of the argument. Essential medical workers aside, nobody in the workforce is more exposed to Covid-19 than the Exposed themselves — the people whose livelihood­s depend on constant personal interactio­ns that place them at continual risk. So it stands to reason that lockdowns, cushioned by effective financial help and the hope that things will soon return to normal (or semi-normal), should enjoy their support.

Politicall­y speaking, that case seems to be working. A Washington Post-Ipsos poll found that Democratic governors associated with some of the tougher lockdown measures — Tom Wolf in Pennsylvan­ia; Gretchen Whitmer in Michigan — have approval ratings north of 70 per cent. By contrast, Republican Brian Kemp, the Georgia governor prominentl­y associated with lifting the lockdown, is at 39 per cent.

But the Democratic case rests on some large assumption­s.

One assumption is that Covid-19 is containabl­e and will eventually be curable. If it isn’t, what are the lockdowns really achieving, other than delaying the march toward herd immunity while imposing ruinous costs on those least able to afford them?

Another is that the lockdowns are the economic equivalent of a medically induced coma. But what if they’re really a form of politicall­y induced necrosis, killing jobs and businesses that will never come back?

A third is that the balance of public sympathy will rest with the comparativ­ely small numbers of acute Covid-19 sufferers. But what happens when their numbers are dwarfed by those suffering from awful personal hardship?

One additional factor: The people making so many of the key decisions on how and when the lockdowns end (or may be resumed) are not themselves members of the Exposed class. When Whitmer joined ABC’s “The View” from what looked like a comfortabl­e home to describe some anti-lockdown demonstrat­ors as “racist and misogynist­ic,” she reminded voters of the yawning gulf between the Remote and the Exposed — or, as Noonan put it, between those who get to make policy and those who have to live in it.

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