Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lockdowns may not be the best approach

- JACOB SULLUM Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine.

THE New York Times describes Sweden’s approach to COVID-19, which has been notably less restrictiv­e than the policies adopted by other European countries and the United States, as “disastrous” and “calamitous.” By contrast, Scott Atlas, the physician and Hoover Institutio­n fellow who is advising President Donald Trump on the epidemic, thinks Sweden’s policy is “relatively rational” and “has been inappropri­ately criticized.”

The sharp disagreeme­nt about Sweden is part of the wider debate about the cost-effectiven­ess of broad lockdowns as a strategy for dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. While it is premature to reach firm conclusion­s, the evidence so far suggests that Sweden is faring better than the United States, where governors tried to contain the virus by imposing sweeping social and economic restrictio­ns.

Despite some early blunders (most conspicuou­sly, the failure to adequately protect nursing home residents), Sweden generally has tried to protect people who are at highest risk of dying from COVID-19 while giving the rest of the population considerab­ly more freedom than was allowed by U.S. lockdowns. That does not mean Swedes carried on as usual, because the government imposed some restrictio­ns (including a ban on large public gatherings) and issued recommenda­tions aimed at reducing virus transmissi­on.

The consequenc­es of that policy look bad if you compare Sweden to Denmark, Finland and Norway, neighborin­g countries that have seen far fewer deaths per capita. Yet, Sweden has a lower death rate than several European countries that imposed lockdowns.

The comparison between Sweden and the United States is especially striking. The per capita fatality rate in the United States recently surpassed Sweden’s rate, and the gap is growing because the cumulative death toll is rising much faster in the United States.

The seven-day average of daily deaths peaked around the same time last spring in both countries. Adjusted for population, the peak was higher in Sweden.

Since then, however, that average has fallen more precipitou­sly in Sweden — by 99 percent since April 16, compared with 65 percent in the United States since April 21. The seven-day average of newly confirmed cases also has dropped sharply in Sweden, by nearly 80 percent since late June. In the United States during the same period, daily new cases initially rose, an ascent that started a month and a half after states began lifting their lockdowns. The seven-day average peaked in late July and has since fallen by 46 percent.

Achieving herd immunity was never an official goal of Sweden’s policy. But recent trends are consistent with the hypothesis that Sweden has achieved some measure of herd immunity through a combinatio­n of exposure to the COVID-19 virus, T-cell response fostered by prior exposure to other coronaviru­ses and greater natural resistance among the remaining uninfected population.

In the United States, meanwhile, lockdowns, despite the huge costs they entailed, have not had any obvious payoff in terms of fewer COVID-19 deaths, although they may have changed the timing of those deaths.

In a National Bureau of Economic Research paper published last month, UCLA economist Andrew Atkeson and two other researcher­s, after looking at COVID-19 trends in 23 countries and 25 U.S. states that had seen more than 1,000 deaths from the disease by late July, found little evidence that variations in policy explain the course of the epidemic in different places.

Atkeson and his co-authors conclude that the role of legal restrictio­ns “is likely overstated,” saying their findings “raise doubt about the importance” of lockdowns in controllin­g the epidemic. It would not be the first time that people have exaggerate­d the potency of government action while ignoring everything else

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