Santa Cruz Sentinel

Questions on vaccine passports

- By Megan McArdle

In the next couple of months, America’s vaccinatio­n program is likely to undergo a radical shift. Suddenly gone will be today’s world of vaccine scarcity, where the anxious and eager spend hours scouring the Web for elusive appointmen­ts. We will enter the land of vaccine overabunda­nce, where public health officials prod, wheedle and beg hesitant adults to please come in and get their shots.

At that point, we’ll collective­ly confront questions that have mostly been theoretica­l: What’s the best way to overcome the understand­able anxiety of those who worry about undetected dangers of novel vaccine technologi­es? How do we locate vaccinatio­n centers to be convenient for people in rural areas?

Most controvers­ial will be this question: What circumstan­ces justify requiring vaccinatio­n? Can it be mandatory for someone to work in a nursing home, enroll in a public school, attend a concert, get on an airplane? Which is to say, how much risk should the rest of us have to accept to respect the conscience rights and bodily autonomy of fellow citizens who don’t want to get vaccinated?

In December, I had a spirited Twitter exchange about this with Noah Rothman of Commentary Magazine. I was, and remain, strongly in favor of vaccine passports. But Rothman isn’t wrong to worry about the effects of a society as divided as ours further partitioni­ng itself with an “immunity caste.” The caste line is likely to harden existing educationa­l and partisan barriers already dangerousl­y ossified.

We also need to reckon with the pragmatic concerns raised by Michael Brendan Dougherty of National Review, who notes that while vaccine passports are often sold as a way to open things up, they would actually “close things down, because it bars people from doing things they’ve already been doing throughout the pandemic: shopping, traveling, gathering together, attending weddings and funerals. You would be institutin­g new and harsher restrictio­ns at the very time the pandemic was ending.”

Raising the privacy costs of, say, booking travel or concert tickets might curtail economic activity we’re desperate to restore. And the strictures would disproport­ionately fall on not just poor or rural Americans but certain groups who aren’t eligible for vaccinatio­n, including children.

As a libertaria­n, I’d add that creating a vaccine passport creates an instrument of some coercive power; if such a thing exists, private entities will use it. All of us should be wary of initiative­s that effectivel­y create a condition of participat­ing in public life especially if coercion becomes a substitute for persuasion.

And yet we should remember that the unvaccinat­ed aren’t the only ones at risk of being shut out of normal life; there are also the people whose immune systems can’t make good use of a vaccine.

We should worry, too about the cost that choosing not to get vaccinated imposes on everyone who is vaccinated: creating a reservoir of disease that can spread to us, whether because our immunity wanes or because a variant mutates enough to evade our defenses. People would get sick: some might die and many others might need booster shots.

As for the economic costs, I’m skeptical that the net effect of vaccinatio­n passports will be to reduce economic activity. Rather, we’re making it less costly for people who are relatively risk-averse and have been avoiding public places, and more costly for the more risk-tolerant who don’t want to get vaccinated. Before vaccines, there were good arguments for both sides of that tradeoff, but as vaccines become broadly available, banning vaccine passports would essentiall­y be subsidizin­g pointless risks.

That’s not to say there aren’t real concerns to address. Vaccine passports are going too far if they become so ubiquitous that they are effectivel­y a mandate if, say, you need one to enter a grocery store or access health care. They should not be deployed until everyone has at least a chance to get a shot. And they must be paired with aggressive efforts both to overcome people’s fears and make it as convenient as possible to get vaccinated.

Vaccine passports may be the best of a set of bad options, but that doesn’t make them a good thing.

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