Starkville Daily News

Even Government­s Can Make New Year’s Resolution­s

- VERONIQUE DE RUGY

It’s the beginning of a new year. It’s almost the beginning of a new presidenti­al administra­tion, too. In theory, now is a perfect time for some resolution­s: to start fresh, fix the mistakes of the past or do what we never got around to doing. In that spirit, I offer some advice to the Biden administra­tion; Congress; and state and local government­s.

State and local government­s should reopen schools. That many schools are still not providing in-person instructio­n is unforgivab­le. We’ve known for months now that in many scenarios, in-person instructio­n poses little risk to children, their teachers and their communitie­s. Indeed, in Germany, school closures were not associated with reduced transmissi­on of COVID-19.

And yet, schools in counties such as mine have been closed for over 300 days, even in the face of the known high costs of online instructio­n. In Arlington County, where I live, failing grades at middle school and high school levels have increased by 200% and 26%, respective­ly.

Sadly, high school children who hoped their athletic performanc­e would help them get into college or get scholarshi­ps have also been stuck at home. Lower-income children and those with disabiliti­es are impacted the most, and equity of access was even used as an excuse to stop all new instructio­n back in March 2020.

As for Congress, it must stop being so generous with other people’s money. This extra spending creates serious economic distortion­s and counterpro­ductive behavior related to unemployme­nt benefits or bailouts.

Legislator­s from both parties have been fiscally reckless for years. But it has gotten worse during this pandemic under the stewardshi­p of a Republican president who openly says that he doesn’t care about higher spending. The result is a Congress that abdicates all sense of restraint and approves large checks to Americans, whether they were profession­ally affected by the COVID-19 crisis or not.

The federal government is dispensing bonuses on top of unemployme­nt insurance payments, often providing more money for not working than working. Other wasteful expenditur­es include repeated bailouts to airlines.

The negative consequenc­es of this unchecked spending will be huge. The Congressio­nal Budget Office, for instance, warned that an extension of unemployme­nt bonuses and benefits creates disincenti­ves to work and a slowdown of the economy. This extra spending also produces an ungodly level of debt, which academic research shows will ultimately slow economic growth. This means that future generation­s will both live in a slower-growth environmen­t and face higher taxes to pay for today’s obscene spending. And this doesn’t even address the cultural distortion­s created by programs designed to pay people not to work.

Finally, the administra­tion must speed up not only the distributi­on of existing vaccines but also the approvals of new drugs. The private sector has delivered the vaccine to fight this pandemic at a speed never before seen. As much as I fear setting the precedent that we can only be freed from destructiv­e lockdowns once we have large-scale vaccinatio­n, it seems like the only way politician­s will allow us to get our lives back. This means that vaccine distributi­on is a priority and needs to be accelerate­d.

Sadly, the government is often inept at doing the basic stuff that the private sector does on a regular basis. That’s why someone on Twitter once joked that if Amazon and Chick-fil-a were in charge of vaccine distributi­on, they’d have the population vaccinated in no time. There’s some truth to this. The new administra­tion should consider leveraging the private sector for that job.

Increasing the supply of vaccines is also a priority. One way is for the Food and Drug Administra­tion to approve new ones faster. Waiting through an endless FDA process costs many lives for no reason. The FDA could also consider authorizat­ion for giving only half a dose of the Moderna vaccine, which has been shown to provide an “identical immune response” to the standard dose.

According to the FDA, the data for the Pfizer-biontech vaccine show that “Efficacy against severe COVID-19 occurring after the first dose was 88.9%.” So the FDA should consider approving “first doses first” distributi­on: The priority should be giving the first dose to more people before giving a smaller group two doses.

These are only a few things I wish to see happen soon. Once that’s done, Congress and state officials can then tackle ending cronyism, reforming welfare and ending all the regulation­s that make it harder for lowerincom­e workers and minorities to work and prosper.

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