Starkville Daily News

Economic hardships will cost 30 times more life years than Covid-19

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Covid- 19 has killed tens of thousands, but the economic hardship caused by a prolonged panic will kill hundreds of thousands.

That premise is based on a 2009 scholarly paper published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics and endorsed by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Its authors are Daniel G. Sullivan, a former Princeton economics professor who is now executive vice president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, and Till Von Wachter, professor of economics at UCLA.

The paper concludes: “We find that job displaceme­nt leads to a 15-20% increase in death rates during the following 20 years. If such increases were sustained beyond this period, they would imply a loss in life expectancy of about 1.5 years for a worker displaced at age 40.”

If you accept the paper’s conclusion­s and run the numbers, a severe economic downtown will kill 30 times more people than Covid-19 has killed so far.

The shutdown has caused 24.6 million Americans to lose their jobs. Each unemployed person loses, on average, 1.5 years of life expectancy. That’s 36.9 million life years. Given the average age of a person in the U. S. is 38, that’s 971,052 million lives lost to the economic collapse caused by the government-mandated shutdown.

In contrast, Covid-19, according to unofficial counts, has caused 81,190 deaths. The average age of death is 80 years old. That’s 1,217,850 life years lost to Covid-19. That is 30 times fewer life years lost to Covid-19 than will be lost to economic hardship.

I think we can all agree that losing your job or business causes stress. Medical research is full of studies illustrati­ng how stress causes a host of deadly illnesses.

Take for instance, our biggest killer, heart disease. According to the University of Rochester Medical Center, “Studies suggest that the high levels of cortisol from long-term stress can increase blood cholestero­l, triglyceri­des, blood sugar, and blood pressure. These are common risk factors for heart disease. Stress can also cause changes that promote buildup of plaque deposits in arteries.

“Even minor stress can trigger heart problems like poor blood flow to the heart muscle. This is a condition in which the heart doesn’t get enough blood or oxygen. And, long-term stress can affect how the blood clots. This makes the blood stickier and increases the risk of stroke.”

Stress also increases the incidence of our second biggest killer, cancer. According to the National Cancer Institute,

“Evidence from experiment­al studies suggests that psychologi­cal stress can affect a tumor’s ability to grow and spread. For example, some studies have shown that when mice bearing human tumors were kept confined or isolated from other mice—conditions that increase stress—their tumors were more likely to grow and spread (metastasiz­e).”

In addition, “Apparent links between psychologi­cal stress and cancer could arise in several ways. For example, people under stress may develop certain behaviors, such as smoking, overeating, or drinking alcohol, which increase a person’s risk for cancer.”

There are numerous reports and studies showing a huge detrimenta­l effect on the mentally ill caused by Covid-19. I could go on and on.

This is a classic example of the Law of Unintended Consequenc­es. Our government, trying to do the right thing, mandated a shutdown of our economy in the hopes of slowing down the virus. But nobody took into account the health consequenc­es of 24.6 million Americans losing their jobs and tens of millions more being scared to death.

In an effort to get Americans to practice good hygiene, our media and our officials scared our country to death, literally, and have created a crisis far worse than the virus itself. As they say, the cure is worse than the disease.

The whole point of the shutdown

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