Rabu, 17 Maret 2021

Still Needed -- The Back To Work Plan - Barokong

I return today, in rincian, to an old topic. In a month or so, cases in hospitals will have stabilized or tapered, and it will be time to begin reopening the economy. But most people will still not have been exposed, the virus will still be looking around ready to break out again. Technological saviors, in particular a vaccine or an effective treatment, will not have arrived. It will be time to return to where we should have been in January. There are two parts to this. First, businesses and people need to adopt common-sense efforts to limit the spread of the virus. Second, we need an intense public health response: A regime of intensive watching, testing, tracing, isolating, locking down hotspots, and running businesses smartly. Finally, I am seeing news all over that this thought is spreading. Today I do my bit to super-spread it. We need both, like yesterday. This is not rocket science. But it does take a detailed, competent bureaucracy, following a well-thought out script. Both are in short supply these days. And, as we are discovering with masks, ventilators, unemployment insurance, and small business loans, you can't make them up and successfully implement them on the spot. Us economists have one big weak spot -- we dream up a acara, like "let the small business administration lend them money," and assume it can happen tomorrow. It does not. (MR "regulatory state is failing.") Even if we had perfect cheap tests that could test everybody every day, who is going to assemble the data on those tests, make sure the positives isolate? That in itself needs a large and well oiled bureaucracy. Which we do not have. Exhibit A: People lined up for unemployment-benefits applications in Hialeah, Fla., on Tuesday. PHOTO: CRISTOBAL HERRERA/SHUTTERSTOCK (WSJ) Well, at least they're wearing masks. ******** Test and isolate is darn hard I do not think Americans are at all realistic about just how intrusive the alternative to Great Depression lockdown is. We face a hard choice, between economic calamity and a deeply offensive restriction on civil liberties.  (Temporary, one hopes.) I'm just as zealous a civil libertarian as I am a free marketer. But I'm an economist and you can't wish away a budget constraint. It also needs a well-oiled bureaucracy, lots of regulatory relief, and is primed for snafu and fubar. "Test, trace, and isolate"write V. V. Chari and Chris Phelan, theirs [Korea, Taiwan] are aggressive but targeted quarantine policies. They quarantine people displaying symptoms, aggressively trace the people they have contacted, test their contacts, and then quarantine those who have the virus (and sometimes those who have just had contact with those who test positive), regardless of whether they are symptomatic or not. Given the huge costs associated with non-targeted shutdowns, the needed testing and tracing infrastructure simply has to be priority one during the mass quarantine period. Put simply, a limited mass quarantine period makes sense only if we use the time it buys us to radically change the facts on the ground once this limited time is over Yes. but somebody in the US needs to do all this. We don't need super duper tests -- a fever, a case history are enough. But tell us everyone you have contacted, haul them in for tests, forcefully quarantine people? In the US? Do we even have the state capacity, let alone the will to do this? Travel restrictions are popping up. You're not allowed to travel to your vacation home. People are being turned away at state lines. Are we going to allow this? A vendor handed food to a customer over a barricade surrounding a residential compound in Wuhan, April 6. NOEL CELIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES (WSJ) This is Wuhan. Now. In the reopening. Barricades surrounding residential compounds. Are we going to do this in the US? Who decides? How long? Wuhan is our future -- the health emergency is over for now, but intrusive public health remains in place, a long with a lot of justified fear.  The chance of a second wave remains strong.  From WSJ In the past few days, however, it has tightened restrictions on some housing complexes, and said others will remain in place, after confirming dozens of new asymptomatic cases. An official newspaper said Monday there could be 10,000 to 20,000 such cases in Wuhan. Opening up will not be easy. (Well, Wuhan is different in many ways -- particularly the transparency and honesty of public officials, and deeply dishonest data throughout the system, which will make it a lot harder for them to get people to believe it's safe! The report was swiftly deleted online. Epidemiologists, U.S. intelligence sources and Wuhan residents suspect that Chinese authorities substantially undercounted infections and deaths over the past several months, especially in Wuhan, in part to boost President Xi Jinping’s image. Say what you will about our officials, nobody is lying about anything.) Dan Grover onHow Chinese Apps handled Covid-19 is instructive. (HT Marginal Revolution as usual). Dan's tone is sort of gee whiz tech wonder, the same tone that pervades American's wait for a vaccine or instant cheap tests. But read between the lines. China’s apps played a pivotal role in supporting some of the most effective tactics the country used in fighting Covid-19, including the use of fever clinics and the strict quarantining of individuals based on their risk level. I'm going to put verbs with subjects back in many quotes today. The local government decides you or your apartment is "high risk" and literally there is security outside blocking entry and exit. Check Your Exposure: Multiple tools let people check whether other passengers of specific planes and trains they’d been on had been diagnosed (this information aggregated by the State Council). Independently-developed let people even check perorangan apartment blocks. This would be very useful, and very effective. And very very illegal in the US, the land of HIPPAA privacy protections. Nobody but nobody can find out if you've tested positive. The wife of a colleague works in a testing lab. They're all still driving to work and sitting three feet from each other because databanks are secure enough to make sure nobody's test results leak. So, are we going to build a whole security and information infrastructure by which names and addresses of positive tests are released to just the right public officials who take just the right steps to enforce isolation? In three weeks flat? Whether private or public, testing and isolating is really intrusive on civil liberties. Security guards at companies and apartment complexes came up with their own schemes to compel sick people to quarantine. This involved doing temperature checks and asking people about their health and travel history before being allowed into offices, stores, and public transit. To help with this, the phone companies provided a service to offer proof of travel history based on location data, in case it was called into question during the grilling. Security guards at apartment complexes? Phone companies keeping track of your location and sharing it with public health authorities? Yes, that's what it takes. if you thought you had coronavirus? You would be sent to a fever clinic. They would take your temperature, your symptoms, medical history, ask where you’d traveled, your contact with anyone infected. They’d whip you through a CT scan … The point of these “fever clinics”  as distinguished from ordinary hospitals, was to give anyone who thought they might be even a little sick a way to get tested and, more importantly, control the spread by isolating even asymptomatic carriers away from their family and co-workers and give them a place to wait it out. A reminder, we don't need recombinant DNA. Symptoms, fever, and "whip you through a CT scan" -- a hilarious idea applied to US medicine -- gives a darn good idea who has it. But "isolating even asymptomatic carriers away from their family and co-workers and give them a place to wait it out." Who does this "isolating" away from "family and co-workers"? That would be the Chinese State. Is the US ready for the idea that the minute you test positive you're whisked away to a hotel, a security guard in front, the fact of your test splashed all over an app for your neighbors to see? (Incidentally, this whole post is worth reading for a view into the much more innovative app culture that seems to be China right now. For one example, Maps directing people to the nearest fever clinics and ICUs. ... tools let users check the quality of a mask given its serial number, view the quantities of masks at stores near them,... Where is Silicon Valley on any of this stuff? If China is heading to "technological dominance," as my fellow good fellows seem to fear, it isn't state run companies investing in AI and quantum computing that will do it -- it's good old American-style private sector innovation, ingenuity and cutthroat competition that they seem to be beating us at. ) ********* Commonsense at work is harder than you think. Alex Tabarrok in MR,Safety protocols for getting back to work. notes several businesses redesigned shifts, to minimize contacts between people in different shifts. The FAA did this, keeping groups of controllers together. Airlines are keeping pilot-copilot teams together. Other safety protocols include: Shift work for white collar workers as well as for blue collar workers. Senior shopping hours. Temperature checks, perhaps via passive fever cameras at work and public transport. Mandatory masks for public transportation. Masks for workers. Sanitation breaks for mandatory hand washing. Quarantining at work for essential workers, as the MLB is thinking of doing despite not being essential. Reducing touch surfaces (even with simple things like propping up bathroom doors) and copper tape for hi-touch surfaces that cannot be eliminated. ...I believe that applying these protocols will allow many of us to work safely. We aren’t ready yet but now is the time to plan for our return.  It seems so obvious. But, grocery store workers are still not wearing masks. The temperature check idea has been around forever, and implemented widely in asian countries. Nobody is doing it in the US. Amazon workers are striking from lack of these basics. See above for unemployment offices. Alex is a bit guilty of passive voice vagueness here. Notice the absence of a subject anywhere here. Actually notice the absence of verbs at all. Who is going to do all this? Governments are imposing lockdowns, governments need to have assurance some level of this is happening before reducing lockdowns, and they haven't even written the guidance sheet and started applying it to "essential" business. Europe also wants to reopen, but I don't see any specific test trace and isolate protocols worked out either. There is a general idea of common sense Salini Impregilo, one of the companies building a new metro line in Milan, on Wednesday said it had restarted work on the project. New measures include body temperature checks at the start of the workday and at lunchtime, the use of face masks, frequent cleaning and disinfection of the work site and common areas, and guaranteeing a one-meter (3.3 feet) distance between people at all times. but that's not a test trace isolate regime, and it's a company, not a government. Eric Budish has it right: the goal of policy has to be to get R You've got three weeks to get this up and running on the ground! The Scott Gottlieb et. al. AEI report is one of the most authoritative and detailed "plans" to date. But overall, it shows really just how far we have to go. Reopening the economy is Phase II. Individual states can move to Phase II when they are able to safely diagnose, treat, and isolate COVID-19 cases and their contacts. Stop and ponder a minute just how far away we are from that. Diagnose. Still no tests, especially for asymptomatic people, still no protocols, not even a Chinese app that evaluates symptoms, temperature and a quick CAT scan. Isolate? And their contacts? ... some physical distancing measures and limitations on gatherings will still need to be in place to prevent transmission from accelerating again. For older adults (those over age 60), those with underlying health conditions, and other populations at heightened risk from COVID-19, continuing to limit time in the community will be important. More of those verbs with ill defined subjects. Just who is going to do this limiting time? Public hygiene will be sharply improved, and deep cleanings on shared spaces should become more routine. Shared surfaces will be more frequently sanitized, among other measures. In addition to case-based interventions that more actively identify and isolate people with the disease and their contacts, the public will initially be asked to limit gatherings, and people will initially be asked to wear fabric nonmedical face masks while in the community to reduce their risk of asymptomatic spread. For want of 5 cent paper products... Really, an advanced industrial nation, 3 months into a crisis is home-sewing face masks? Those who are sick will be asked to stay home and seek testing for COVID-19. Testing should become more widespread and routine as point-of-care diagnostics are fully deployed in doctors’ offices. This is all pretty dreamy, and far short of the detailed, intrusive, full of bureaucratic snafu effort that diagnose, trace, isolate implies. ********* The bungled recovery Meanwhile, our government is applying 2008 policies to the 2020 invention like a two year old with a hammer. Incentives matter. I opined last week that replacement rates past 100% would tempt employers. On cue in today's WSJ Executive Chairman Harvey Spevak had a surprising message to stakeholders. “We believe most will be better off receiving government assistance during our closure,” ... Equinox joins a number of companies, including Macy’s ... and Steelcase ...that are citing the federal government’s beefed-up unemployment benefits as they furlough or lay off staff amid the coronavirus pandemic. The stimulus package is changing the calculus for some employers, which can now cut payroll costs without feeling they are abandoning their employees. Caesy Mulligan and Brian Blase have a good WSJ oped on this the legislative remedies Congress recently passed will make the recovery slower once it’s safe to return to work. But never before in American history could a majority of the workforce get a raise merely by receiving a pink slip. When it’s safe for businesses like restaurants and hotels to reopen, employers will be competing with the government for a potential employee’s time. Because many unemployed workers will earn more from remaining idle, they won’t rush to come back. This will make it difficult for many businesses, particularly smaller ones, to produce at the pre-virus level of output. The legislation also seems to subsidize layoffs by big companies. In another provision Washington assumes responsibility for the unemployment-insurance contributions made by government and nonprofit employers through 2020—eliminating what is in effect a tax on layoffs. That will mean more payroll slashing by local governments and nonprofits. I hope as we get to Phase II we can all start thinking about huge macro policies. I will ********* Humor TheSanta Clara County list of "essential" businesses makes interesting reading. Construction, but only of the types listed in this subparagraph below:... Affordable housing that is or will be income-restricted, including multi-unit or mixed-use developments containing at least 10% income-restricted units; From an email correspondent, maybe DIY PPE isn't such a good idea ************ UPDATE: Since what I am calling for likely will not happen, I can't find a better forecast than Tyler Cowen's, which I repeat in its entirety: I don’t view “optimal length of shutdown” arguments compelling, rather it is about how much pain the political process can stand.  I expect partial reopenings by mid-May, sometimes driven by governors in the healthier states, even if that is sub-optimal for the nation as a whole.  Besides you can’t have all the banks insolvent because of missed mortgage payments.  But R0 won’t stay below 1 for long, even if it gets there at all.  We will then have to shut down again within two months, but will then reopen again a bit after that.  At each step along the way, we will self-deceive rather than confront the level of pain involved with our choices.  We may lose a coherent national policy on the shutdown issue altogether, not that we have one now.  The pandemic yo-yo will hold.  At some point antivirals or antibodies will kick in (read Scott Gottlieb), or here: “There are perhaps 4-6 drugs that could be available by Fall and have robust enough treatment effect to impact risk of another epidemic or large outbreaks after current wave passes. We should be placing policy bets on these likeliest opportunities.”  We will then continue the rinse and repeat of the yo-yo, but with the new drugs and treatments on-line with a death rate at maybe half current levels and typical hospital stays at three days rather than ten.  It will seem more manageable, but how eager will consumers be to resume their old habits?  Eventually a vaccine will be found, but getting it to everyone will be slower than expected.  The lingering uncertainty and “value of waiting,” due to the risk of second and third waves, will badly damage economies along the way.
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