12/20/2023 0 Comments Andy slavitt blog![]() Slavitt’s simple narrative–Trump bad, Biden good, Follow the Science, Be Kind–can’t help us as we try to improve future policy. And given that the budgetary cost has been $5 trillion in one year, in the US alone, plus the GDP cost, the human suffering and death, we should send the vaccine companies a nice $100 billion check along with flowers, chocolates, a thank you card, and a "I hope you'll be there next time" note. Pharmaceutical companies are making billions! Yes. Can you believe it? A life-saving, economy-boosting, pandemic ending, incredibly-cheap vaccine, cost twice as much as the flu vaccine! The horror.Īs Alex has said previously, all you need to know about cost-benefit analysis is that Trillions > Billions. Instead he winds up complaining that “even with $1 billion worth of funding for research and development, Moderna ended up selling its vaccine at about twice the cost of an influenza vaccine.” (p. Perhaps because Slavitt believes his own hyperbole about a laissez-faire economy he can’t quite bring himself to say that Operation Warp Speed, a big government program of early investment to accelerate vaccines, was a tremendous success. To say nothing of a year and counting of eviction moratoriums and more. An unemployed minimum wage worker in the United States, for example, was paid a much larger share of their income during the pandemic than a similar worker in Canada, France, or Germany In fact, the US fiscal response to the pandemic was among the largest and most generous in the world. If you read Slavitt uncritically you’d assume–as Slavitt does–that when the pandemic hit, US workers were cast aside to fend for themselves. Filburn 1942 (you can’t grow wheat on your own land to make your own bread if the federal government does t like it.) Laissez-faire capitalism?! The US hasn't had laissez-faire capitalism since, well Wickard v. It's not hyperbole, it is the unquestioned narrative, it's an inshallah people can add to any statement without question. It's not that this is "hyperbole." It's that this is the sort of mushy sentiment that one can pass around at Washington cocktail parties as easily as write on the front pages of all major media these days, and everyone says yes, sure, without batting an eyelash. ![]() ![]() It would be laughable except for the fact that such hyperbole biases our thinking. Laissez-faire capitalism?! Political hyperbole paired with lazy writing. response to the pandemic differed from the response in other parts of the world largely in the degree to which the government was reluctant to interfere with our system of laissez-faire capitalism… Children couldn’t see their friends or even play in the park. Jobs and businesses were lost in the millions. Birthdays, anniversaries, even funerals were relegated to Zoom. The pandemic and the lockdowns split Americans from their friends and families. 65)ĭata from the Oxford Coronavirus Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT) show that the US “sacrifice” as measured by the stringency of the COVID policy response–school closures workplace closures restrictions on public gatherings restrictions on internal movements mask requirements testing requirements and so forth–was well within the European and Canadian average. ![]() In comparison to most of these other countries, the American public was impatient, untrusting, and unaccustomed to sacrificing individual rights for the public good. leads Slavitt to make blanket assertions-the kind that everyone of a certain type knows to be true–but in fact are false. ![]() In contemporary discussion, people can just say things that are blatantly untrue, and it all washes over us. The review doesn't just destroy an otherwise forgettable book, but it really raises these larger questions whether we are so politically polarized that we can no longer learn from mistakes. This big question frames a must-read Alex Tabarrok Marginal Revolution review of Andy Slavitt’s Preventable. Will the lesson from covid look skeptically on the disastrous performance of CDC and FDA, evaluate whether lockdowns did good commensurate with cost, question the need to spread trillions of newly printed money around, measure the effectiveness of masks that have now become political symbols? Or will this simply be enshrined as the playbook? Do we twist every event to push our partisan narratives, facts be damned? A blame-Trump-for-everything camp offers some hope, but they're not clear what they would do differently as most of the world's response was the same or less effective than our own. But learning from mistakes is the only way to get ahead.īailouts and stimulus from 2008 seem to have followed the latter possibility. After great events, will the US government and political system learn from mistakes? Or will we raise the bridges and enshrine whatever was done last time as holy writ, to be repeated again? Reputations of people in power push for the latter. ![]()
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