New York Post

PROOF NY’S LEADERS BUNGLED COVID ‘ Florida . . . outperform­ed New York metric.’ on every pandemic

- JOEL ZINBERG

WHAT a difference a few years make. In 2020, the mainstream media lauded Gov. Andrew Cuomo for his strong but compassion­ate COVID-19 leadership. He won a special Emmy for his “masterful” press briefings and a book contract from a major publisher to discuss his “leadership lessons.” Celebritie­s declared themselves “Cuomosexua­ls.” Cuomo was admired for his willingnes­s to impose lockdown measures that though painful would purportedl­y protect society in the long run. He criticized leaders of Florida and other states who were reopening their economies in late spring 2020 for ignoring science. “You played politics with this virus, and you lost,” he intoned. Well, actually not.

A new study I coauthored with colleagues at the Paragon Health Institute confirms what many long suspected: States like New York that forced severe, prolonged lockdowns did not significan­tly improve health outcomes compared with less restrictiv­e states — and had much worse economic and education outcomes. States like Florida that ignored the pseudo-science Cuomo and multiple federal officials promoted did far better.

We took advantage of our constituti­onal system of government: The different approaches each state took in deciding which measures to impose and for how long created an opportunit­y to compare divergent strategies’ outcomes.

Paragon’s study compared Oxford

University’s index of government responses to COVID in various states

— including but not limited to closing schools and businesses, canceling public events, stay-at-home orders and masking policies — to health, economic and education outcomes.

We measured health outcomes by

COVID deaths and all-cause excess mortality. COVID mortality is strongly associated with advancing age and pre-existing conditions such as obesity, diabetes and hypertensi­on. So to compare one state to another, one must account for, as an example, what share of each state’s population is of advanced age. We therefore adjusted states’ COVID mortality for age distributi­on and prevalence of obesity and diabetes.

Our finding: States with more severe government interventi­ons did not have better health outcomes than less restrictiv­e states.

But imposing more severe lockdowns led to much worse economic outcomes — increased unemployme­nt and decreased gross domestic product — and much worse education outcomes — less in-person schooling, which studies show leads to decreased test scores and longterm, possibly permanent, educationa­l and economic disadvanta­ges.

The study also revealed people voted with their feet in response to lockdown measures’ severity. Census data on domestic migration show that annual average movement between states rose 44% in the pandemic period (July 1, 2020, to June 30, 2022) compared with the five-year pre-pandemic average. We found a significan­t correlatio­n between states’ degree of lockdowns and outmigrati­on, suggesting people fled states with more severe restrictio­ns for states with less severe measures.

No state better illustrate­s the study’s findings than New York. The Empire State had the highest score on the Oxford index (most severe lockdowns) of all 50 states and DC. But it was among the worst scorers in health, economic and education outcomes: 47 out of 51 for health, 48 for economic and 31 for education.

New York’s already-significan­t out-migration surged during the pandemic. An average of 181,938 people left New York each prepandemi­c year. But the loss nearly doubled to 352,185 people in 2021. Over the two pandemic years, New York lost 651,742 residents, 3.2% of its July 1, 2020, population.

Florida — which Cuomo and his media enablers vilified for reopening businesses and schools and which his successor Kathy Hochul later urged Republican opponents to “jump on a bus and head down to” — outperform­ed New York on every pandemic metric.

Despite having one of the nation’s lowest scores on the Oxford index (lowest-severity lockdowns), Florida’s health outcomes were about average (New York was 47th).

The Sunshine State outperform­ed New York on education and economic outcomes as well, coming in third and 13th best in the nation respective­ly. And Florida, which had consistent­ly large migration inflows averaging 169,569 per pre-pandemic year, saw a 59% jump during the pandemic years.

When the next pandemic comes, Americans would be well-advised to ignore media darlings like Cuomo, cheered on by the public-health establishm­ent, and listen to leaders like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis who were willing to balance the benefits of their responses against the economic, educationa­l, health and social costs.

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