Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

How much for vaccines in stimulus bill?

GOP says plan spends little on the virus itself

- Jon Greenberg

Republican­s’ primary objection to the COVID-19 and economic stimulus bill making its way through Congress is that it spends relatively little on the disease itself.

In a speech on the Senate floor, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said the $1.9 trillion package known as the American Rescue Plan was loaded with “pet projects” that had nothing to do with the pandemic or economic recovery.

“All kinds of liberal wish list items that would do nothing to help American families put COVID behind them,” McConnell said Feb. 24. “Just about 1% of the money is for vaccines.”

McConnell’s focus on 1% for vaccines caught our attention.

His staff said he drew on the words of the Democrats themselves when they unveiled a key section of the sweeping bill.

The chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., highlighte­d a handful of items in the package in a news release, including $14 billion for vaccines, $46 billion for testing, contact tracing and mitigation, and $25 billion to reduce health disparitie­s across the country.

The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office and the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget use the $14 billion figure.

However, there are different ways to add up the numbers.

COVID-19 and stimulus bill

R-Kentucky

In the American Rescue Plan, “just about 1% of the money is for vaccines.”

Math is about right.

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The same Democratic-controlled committee that provided the $14 billion figure came out a few days later with a factsheet that uses an amount of $20 billion. And they note there’s an additional $5 billion for advanced vaccine developmen­t.

The different totals depend on what counts as vaccine spending. The lower figure in the first Democratic press release included only work at the CDC, the FDA, and ensuring a reliable supply chain to produce and administer the vaccine.

The higher Democratic tally included other activities, such as sequencing the genome of virus variants and paying for health care workers to administer the vaccine.

How much does this matter? In percentage terms, not that much. Even a total of $25 billion still amounts to just over 1% of the bill’s estimated price tag. That’s because the overall package includes big ticket items such as $422 billion in stimulus checks to individual­s, $350 billion for state and local government­s, and $242 billion for expanded unemployme­nt benefits.

But in terms of dollars, there’s a big difference between $14 billion and $20 billion or $25 billion.

The point is, it’s possible to use percentage­s to make an amount appear small, and actual dollars to make the same amount look substantia­l.

Context helps

The most heated debate in Congress centers on how the American Rescue Plan deals with the economic damage of the pandemic.

McConnell’s claim has more to do with the money aimed most directly at the virus and pandemic itself. In that vein, focusing strictly on vaccines leaves out a lot of the picture.

The biggest overlooked piece is $46 billion for testing and other surveillan­ce work.

That work is as important as any other, said Amesh Adalja at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. Better surveillan­ce helps target vaccine distributi­on to certain states or communitie­s, and is part of spotting virus mutations to improve the next generation of vaccines.

“There is a continuum and integratio­n between all response activities,”

Adajla said. “Those include testing, tracing, isolating and vaccinatin­g.”

Vaccines have to make their way into people’s arms, and the legislatio­n funds several programs to support that work, including $7.6 billion to hire 100,000 community health workers.

We found different ways to add up all the spending tied directly to COVID-19. On the low end, the total is about $100 billion. On the high end, the White House says it is $160 billion, which adds items such as $10 billion in medical supplies, $24 billion in child care for health care and other essential workers, and literally dozens of smaller amounts.

Depending on which line items you include, the legislatio­n would spend anywhere from 4.5% to 8.5% of the total cost directly on the pandemic’s health aspects.

U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell,

The statement

The verdict

Our ruling

McConnell said that in the American Rescue Plan, “just about 1% of the money is for vaccines.” Based on Democratic figures of either $14 billion or $20 billion for vaccines, and a $1.9 trillion overall price tag, the math is about right.

The American Rescue Plan spends much more on the financial damage caused by the virus than on its health aspects alone, and McConnell picked a way to minimize the health-related spending. The statistic omits a much greater amount of spending on overall efforts to contain the pandemic. That ranges from about $100 billion to $160 billion, or between 5% and 8% of the bill’s total cost.

His statement is accurate, but needs additional informatio­n. That’s our definition of Mostly True.

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