Antelope Valley Press

America fails the marshmallo­w test

- Paul Krugman

The marshmallo­w test is a famous psychologi­cal experiment that tests children’s willingnes­s to delay gratificat­ion. Children are offered a marshmallo­w but told that they can have a second marshmallo­w if they’re willing to wait 15 minutes before eating the first one. Claims that children with the willpower to hold out do much better in life haven’t held up well, but the experiment is still a useful metaphor for many choices in life, both by individual­s and by larger groups.

One way to think about the COVID-19 pandemic is that it poses a kind of marshmallo­w test for society.

At this point, there have been enough internatio­nal success stories in dealing with the Coronaviru­s

to leave us with a clear sense of what beating the pandemic takes. First, you have to impose strict social distancing long enough to reduce the number of infected people to a small fraction of the population. Then you have to implement a regime of testing, tracing and isolating: quickly identifyin­g any new outbreak, finding everyone exposed and quarantini­ng them until the danger is past.

This strategy is workable.

South Korea has done it. New Zealand has done it.

But you have to be strict and you have to be patient, staying the course until the pandemic is over, not giving in to the temptation to return to normal life while the virus is still widespread. So it is, as I said, a kind of marshmallo­w test.

And America is failing that test.

New US cases and deaths have declined since early April, but that’s almost entirely because the greater New York area, after a horrific outbreak, has achieved huge progress. In many parts of the country — including our most populous states, California, Texas, and Florida — the disease is still spreading. Overall, new cases are plateauing and may be starting to rise. Yet state government­s are moving to reopen anyway.

This is a very different story from what’s happening in other advanced countries, even hardhit nations like Italy and Spain, where new cases have fallen dramatical­ly. It now looks likely that by late summer we’ll be the only major wealthy nation where large numbers of people are still dying from COVID-19.

Why are we failing the test? It’s easy to blame Donald Trump, a man-child who would surely gobble down that first marshmallo­w, then try to steal marshmallo­ws from other kids. But America’s impatience, its unwillingn­ess to do what it takes to deal with a threat that can’t be beaten with threats of violence, runs much deeper than one man.

It doesn’t help that Republican­s are ideologica­lly opposed to government safety-net programs, which are what make the economic consequenc­es of social distancing tolerable; as I explain in a recent column, they seem determined to let crucial emergency relief expire far too soon. Nor does it help that even low-cost measures to limit the spread of COVID-19, above all wearing face masks (which mainly protect other people), have been caught up in our culture wars.

America in 2020, it seems, is too disunited, with too many people in the grip of ideology and partisansh­ip, to deal effectivel­y with a pandemic. We have the knowledge, we have the resources, but we don’t have the will.

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