I’m not sure if this line of thinking/questions fit in this thread or not, but it deals with the economy. And I’ll preface this whole thing by saying, THERE ARE NO EASY ANSWERS HERE.
Im a numbers guy, always have been. Work as a life and health insurance agent, so familiar with life expectancy charts, risk, and mortality rates and the like (yeah, I’m a hoot at parties).
Please correct any numbers that I might have wrong in the following. From what I’ve read and heard, as testing increases and more people are found to actually have this virus, the computed death rate from it drops. Initially we thought this had a death rate of 4-5%, but as we realized the scale of the infection and just how many people have it it’s dropped to around 1%. It may drop more. That 1% (at least from Italy’s numbers, which I trust more than China’s) has an average age of about 80, and about half have 3+ pre ex conditions of various sorts.
These other countries, especially Italy and China, have put themselves on a countrywide lockdown. Like complete shut down. I not only see that as being tough to implement here, but also Yup impossible for Americans as a whole to adhere to. Sure, FBGs (myself included) will listen to the warnings and heed the advice, but I don’t see enough Americans doing so to the point of it being effective nationwide.
Looking at the worst case scenarios given by the CDC (and others) for the US, the range presented was between 200k and 1.7m deaths from this. If these have been updated, please let me know. On an average year, the US already has 2.8M deaths - and a chunk of those are from the most susceptible to the virus (older and those with a pre-ex).
Being the numbers guy that I am, one of my favorite recent movies has been The Big Short. I’m sure many of you have seen it - amazing cast list and it won quite a few awards. It was also, by and large, very accurate. A line in the movie (yes, said by Brad Pitt) is that for every percent increase in unemployment, 40k people die. I’ve been thinking a lot about that line lately, with our current events. Did a little digging to see where that came from and it’s accuracy, came across
this. It’s a podcast talking about that line specifically, and in it a financial journalist for The New York Times and NPR says that’s a “good rule of thumb.” With shutting everything down, we’re talking about 20+% unemployment. If we assume that’s a 17% increase, and that stat is true and holds true through this situation, we’re talking about ~700k people. Here in America, people’s healthcare is tied to their jobs, if they lose their jobs, they lose their healthcare (yes, lots of caveats to that statement). People take their own lives. They take the lives of others with increased crime. Strokes and heart attacks go up. That all has consequences. THERE ARE NO EASY ANSWERS.
Where I’m going with this increasingly long post, is that I don’t see the half baked measures we’re taking to stop the spread working with our society. Americans will simply not adhere to a total lockdown for 2+ months (and I’ve heard it could take much longer), and no guarantee that we won’t have outbreaks starting back up late summer when we let kids go back to school, or play baseball/football games. Some doctors have said we need 6-12 months of this self isolation stuff. Won’t happen here. So I don’t see a way around hundreds of thousands dying from this no matter what we conceivably do. I also don’t see a way that our economy isn’t going to be horribly and permanently harmed. Ok, maybe not “permanently”, but we’re talking years if not a decade or longer to fully recover from, and that only starts when things get back to “normal”, whatever that will end up being. Sorry for the long post, wrapping my head around our new reality.