Did The Shutdowns Save Lives? A Year Later, Stats Suggest Not – The Federalist

Posted: March 16, 2021 at 2:57 am

The government response to COVID-19 has mostly been a failure. Theatric, yessee New York Gov. Andrew Cuomos Emmy. Symbolic, yes. But there is no evidence shutdowns did anything but deepen the economic suffering, increase suicides, and prevent lifesaving medical tests and treatments.

With the exception of former President Trumps effort to speed research, approval, and rollout of a COVID vaccine through Operation Warp Speed, and efforts to discourage the spread of the virus through border restrictions (now abandoned by President Biden), what policies can objectively be shown to have worked?

Last May, in The Federalist I examined state-level unemployment through April, using job losses as a proxy for the severity of government-imposed shutdowns, finding these even then suggested lockdowns had no effect on the course of a virus released by what appears to be sloppy lab procedures in Wuhan, China. I also found a statistical connection between a states reliance on mass transit and a higher fatality rate.

One year on, has anything changed? What does the data say? Does anything suggest that the shutdowns were worth it?

The change in private employment among the states from January 2020 to December 2020, the latest month for which data is available, can be used as a proxy for the severity of government edicts to slow the spread of the virus. It represents closed restaurants and family-owned businesses, destroyed lives and lifes savings.

In theory, this pain should have been rewarded with a lower COVID fatality rate. Thats what we were told as we obediently stayed at home. Yet the data shows no benefit earned by the states that inflicted the largest destruction on their job base, judging by the fatality rates from COVID. Graphically, it looks like this.

Another constant feature of the corporate medias COVID-19 coverage was the claim red states were killing their people. Again, the data after a year shows no correlation between a states level of freedom, as measured by the Fraser Institute in their annual Economic Freedom of North America survey, and COVID fatalities.

However, there is a modest correlation between economic freedom and the strength of the job market over the past year, although it is important to note that the correlation between freedom on the state level and job creation has been a long-term trend, one that COVID-19 did not change.

Digging deeper into the data, a regression analysis seeking correlations to per capita COVID-19 fatalities at the state level to five variablesuse of mass transit, change in private-sector employment, economic freedom, share of the population 65 and older, and the percentage of adults with obesity in 2020finds only a weak connection (adjusted R square of 0.19). Only two variables are significant in this correlation: the share of mass transit use (P-value of 0.001) and prevalence of obesity (P-value of 0.009).

This would suggest that the virus takes its course regardless of the severity of shutdowns. Thats not to say that any government action is futile. For instance, the Trump administrations effort to speed development of an effective vaccine appears likely to save a significant number of peopleassuming the vaccines retain their effectiveness as the virus mutates.

If the preceding macroeconomic analysis isnt convincing, there are also peer-reviewed studies that find the same. For instance, Ioannidis, Bhattacharya, et al. publishing in the European Journal of Clinical Investigation, concluded, we do not find significant benefits on case growth of more restrictive NPIs (nonpharmaceutical interventions) such as mandatory stayathome orders and business closures.

Thus, with no statistically consistent difference in virus fatality outcomes between Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New Yorks 11.9 percent drop in private-sector jobs, Gov. Gavin Newsom of Californias 8.3 percent loss of jobs, Gov. Greg Abbotts Texas decline of 3.7 percent, and Gov. Ron DeSantiss Florida drop of 5.1 percent, it makes sense to encourage opening the economy while protecting the most vulnerable populations.

Lastly, as a crowning example of our politicians proclivity to reward failure, it is illuminating to see that more than 90 percent of the $1.9 trillion Biden stimulus is not directly related to COVID-19. Some $350 billion of the behemoth spending bill bails out the same state and local governments that inflicted the greatest damage on their own economies, realizing no measurable gain in public health.

As the Foundation for Economic Education notes, Bidens bill spends more than twice as much lining the pockets of bankrupt blue states than it does actually addressing public health. But then, spending, not public health, is the purpose of the bill.

Chuck DeVore is vice president of national initiatives at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and served in the California State Assembly from 2004 to 2010.

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Did The Shutdowns Save Lives? A Year Later, Stats Suggest Not - The Federalist

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