Eakinomics: Rising
COVID-19 Cases and Public Policy
According to AAF’s COVID-19 tracker, weekly cases are
at the second-highest level since the tracker began in January. There are
numerous reports of the capacity of hospitals and health systems being
strained, and the real time data on household spending, inflation, and
employment are troubling as well. What is to be done?
It is important to remember that we have seen this all before, beginning in
March of 2020 and then again in the late fall and winter of this past year.
It is possible to learn from those episodes. Indeed, one of the most
important lessons is to avoid the silver bullet approach to policymaking.
On the economic front, this means avoiding another round of pointless demand
stimulus such as checks. The problems in the economy have stemmed from the
inability to spend because of fear of the spread of the virus and supply
constraints. In those circumstances, huge demand-side errors such as the
American Rescue Plan simply created sharp asset and consumer price inflation.
On the public health front, the answer is not “lockdowns or bust.” We have
learned that most of the benefits can be achieved by masks, social distancing
and, especially, vaccines. Lockdowns do too much economic damage. Similarly,
it is important to avoid an exclusive focus on vaccines. There is a lot to be
said for using a portfolio of prevention (vaccines), detection (rapid tests
being a key; for a recent controversy see here and here), and therapeutics. Most important, these
measures should be deployed with an eye to having them in place over the
foreseeable future. Framing the problem as either COVID-19 is here or it is
gone has been misleading and unhelpful. There reality is that COVID-19 is
here and will continue to be here. The issue is simply the magnitude of the
risks.
What should be done right now? The same economic and public health things that should have
been done last year.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment