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Sweden takes the big coronavirus risk for none of the economic gain

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If we’ve learnt anything about the COVID-19 pandemic, it is that history may not repeat but it does have a habit of popping its head up and asking, ‘Remember me?’

The history of Australian government is characterised with good intentions marred by parochialism and petty power struggles that serendipitously led to reasonable if not ideal outcomes.

A century ago, states began closing their borders as the Spanish Influenza pandemic kicked off in earnest in Australia in January, 1919.

Being an enormous island at the bottom of the world, Australia had the benefit of watching the Spanish Influenza pandemic unfold almost everywhere else and sensibly decided to take steps to diminish its impact on what was then our four million population.

The pandemic’s origins were probably somewhere in the continental US. Kansas City may have been ground zero for the Spanish Flu pandemic. It certainly wasn’t Spain. The pandemic merely assumed its Castellano nomenclature because it infected the Spanish monarch, King Alfonso XIII early doors. He survived it and was probably lucky to do so. The Spanish Royal Family genealogical chart was more stick than tree and monarchs came and went displaying the type of inbreeding we see in French bulldogs today.

Many of Alfonso’s countrymen and women dropped like nine pins. A lot did not get up. The influenza strain scaled the borders into war torn France and then into England not long afterwards and it was away.

The first diagnosed case came from a US military base in Kansas City. But virologists are uncertain if that US serviceman was Patient One. More than likely US servicemen entered Europe with one strain of the flu only for it to mutate into the nasty Spanish variety

A century later and we still can’t be certain what kicked off a pandemic that killed an estimated 50 million people, more than double the number of deaths, military and civilian, from World War I.

Back in Australia, great meetings between the states and the Commonwealth took place. Seven days’ quarantine was required for anyone entering the country, including many returning servicemen from Europe.

With several ceremonial strokes of the pen, the states happily ceded control for the national management of the pandemic to the Commonwealth. An agreement was signed in Melbourne in November 1918 just weeks after armistice, giving the Commonwealth the capacity to close state borders based on reports of outbreaks from the states’ Chief Medical Officers.

The country was ready. All things being equal, we could not have been better prepared.

And then it all went to hell in a moment.

In January 1919, a soldier was diagnosed with Spanish Flu in Sydney and, as was required under the November agreement, New South Wales notified the Commonwealth and the state was proclaimed infected. The problem was the soldier had travelled by train from Melbourne but as the Victorians had not informed the Commonwealth, New South Wales angrily closed the borders and sent its own wallopers to prevent any crossing of the Murray.

The agreement was hurled into the bin and from then on it was every state for itself.

Queensland closed its borders. Where crossings of the Tweed were permitted it came at a price and tourists and returning soldiers were required to quarantine in camps and enjoy the Queensland sun banged up while enduring enforced injections and ten minute stints in a respiratory chamber. The Queensland government knocked out a women’s toilet. Ah, Queensland. Beautiful one day, a leper colony the next.

It may have made some sense to close off Tasmania It probably made sense to isolate Tasmania which subsequently suffered relatively few infections and just 171 deaths. But the Tasmanians were unhappy with iso and many protested insisting that quarantine of travellers across the Bass Strait be reduced from seven days to four. Tasmania may have been spared the

The South Australian government shut its borders and ad hoc camps were established that the state refused to even acknowledge let alone ensure decent accommodations.

When NSW put the shutters up, Western Australia was cut off from the rest of the country at least by rail amid the predictable calls for succession.

There and in the Northern Territory, death rates in remote indigenous communities from Spanish Influenza were as high as one in two.

Across the country, returned servicemen were denied their homecoming parades. Family reunions were delayed which set many servicemen to seething. After what they had endured on The Western Front, who could blame them? Many jumped quarantine, only to find churches, theatres and worst of all, pubs shut.

If it sounds like COVID-19 management by the states is a routine rerun of history, you’d be wrong because Victoria did not impose any restrictions on its people. Wearing face masks was encouraged but not mandated and there were no restrictions on travel interstate which wasn’t of much use because the borders were closed by wallopers from other states.

Still it flies in the face of the People’s Republic of Victoria today where one might expect one day to see a large wall traversing the Murray visible from the lunar surface. Construction funded by you know who.

But here’s the thing, immunologists with the benefit of 100 years of hindsight will tell you that state border closures on the mainland made no difference to the spread of Spanish Influenza in 1918-19.

Of course, there was no air travel and clearly less traffic crossing state borders than there would be now but the fact remains, the states ignored expert opinion then and did as they pleased, driven more by a sort of Sheffield Shield of hollow boasts and bitter recriminations which infected our history then and taints our present now.

It might be that the COVID-19 track and trace programs the states have in place are limited by the old jurisdictional bunfights which really would be a case of history repeating. If so, they should say so rather than deflect questions with specious reasoning and contradictory medical opinion.

In the end, Australia suffered 13,000 deaths from Spanish Influenza. The toll was low, almost negligible compared with the great cost to the nation of the staggering casualty rates from the battlefields in western Europe in what was then referred to as The Great War. 

Just as then it is difficult to understand now why state premiers pulled the drawbridges up. It is even harder to figure why they remain up today. What we do know is our state premiers don’t bother too much with history.

This pandemic has a way of turning accepted truths on their heads.

We’ve all seen or heard commentators supportive of the Swedish approach, donning the Nordic gold cross on blue background in beanies and scarfs to cheer them on.

There has been a bit of nonsense spoken about the Swedish approach. It has been driven largely by happenstance rather than design. The Swedish Constitution does not allow for lock downs by political edict.

There is encouragement to social distance, for people to work from home especially if they are in high risk categories. Usage of Stockholm’s public transit system is down 50 per cent whereas in Sydney in April it was down almost 90 per

Nevertheless, the theory from the barrackers goes that Sweden’s economy is churning on throughout the pandemic. Bars and restaurants are open. Everyone is having a good time.

I am sad to say, the data is coming in now and it is not looking good.

A Danish study released earlier this week revealed that Danish consumers in lockdown conditions similar to those in Australia and elsewhere around the world reduced their spending by 29 per cent. In Sweden with no mandated lockdown, it was 25 per cent.

The study was taken from 860,000 people across both countries who are active customers with Danske Bank, the second largest bank in Scandinavia and measured spending of EFTPOS and ATM transactions, bill and invoice payments and cash withdrawals. It is broadly representative of both populations.

The fact that all three authors of the report are economists might give us pause. You could put four economists in a room for a couple of hours and they would emerge with six different theories. The fact that all three authors are Danish economists might speak of a bit of Scandinavian one-upmanship.

People keeping social distances at a shopping centre in Stokholm. Picture: AFP

But the data doesn’t lie. The difference between two like countries, one with lockdowns, the other without, indicates the difference in consumer spending was next to nothing.

The study shows people will naturally reduce their spending in times of pandemic. It is the virus itself not the lockdown which causes the greatest harm.

Sweden’s central bank, the Riksbank, provided two possible scenarios for the country’s economic outlook for the remainder of the year, based on two models for the extent of the pandemic, one with recovery commencing in the third quarter, the other with the effects of the pandemic continuing into 2021.

In the first scenario, gross domestic product is predicted to contract by 6.9 per cent in 2020 before rebounding to grow 4.6 per cent in 2021. In a more negative prediction Sweden’s GDP could contract by 9.7 per cent with recovery limping along at 1.7 per cent in 2021.

The forecasts in Denmark from Danish Financial Institution, De Økonomiske Råd adopted the same two scenario approach, one with the affects of the pandemic easing this year forecasting a 3.5 per cent decline in GDP in 2020, the other more gloomy scenario, a 5.5 per cent decline.

On these figures, it would seem Sweden has taken all the risks for no economic benefit.

The shining light of redemption comes in the form of what Sweden’s Chief Epidemiologist, Dr Anders Tegnell, this week predicted was herd immunity in Sweden’s capital, Stockholm “within weeks”.

For the record, as of yesterday there were 28,583 diagnosed cases of COVID-19 in Sweden with a population of 10.3 million. There were 10,188 diagnosed cases in Stockholm with a population of 975,000. The death rate in Sweden is 342.6 per million people, lower than France (414.78), Italy (514.5), the UK (488.6) and Spain (579.7), but higher than Denmark (92.0).

The Swedish approach to COVID-19 is to promote herd immunity in the absence of a vaccine. Many immunologists believe it may not be possible given SARS-CoV-2’s novelty and potential for mutation.

A woman walks through the Kungstradgarden in Stockholm. Picture: AFP

What is starting to become understood is the rate of COVID-19 infection needs to be around 70 per cent for herd immunity to kick in.

In another study published earlier this week, this one of an epidemiological investigation by the Pasteur Institute, 4.4 per cent of the French population – or 2.8 million people – were found to have been infected with the SARS CoV-2 virus. The official number of recorded cases as of yesterday was 180,000. The study showed the infection rate is estimated at 15 times that of the number of diagnosed cases.

In Australia, Chief Medical Officer Professor Brendan Murphy puts the figure at around ten times the recorded cases of infection, somewhere around 70,000. It may actually be a lot less given the dribble of diagnosed cases across the nation in the last week.

Putting the French study figures across New York City’s recorded cases, there is an infection rate of 63 per cent. Still too low for herd immunity to occur and look at the carnage: 27,463 deaths as of yesterday. And those are just the deaths that occur in hospitals.

People enjoy the warm weather as they sit at Kungstradgarden in Stockholm. Picture: AFP

As an aside, there is another study, or series of studies that confirm there have been no recorded cases of transmission from children aged 10 or below anywhere in the world.

That’s around 3.3 million Australians. They should be at school. They need to be taught face-to-face to continue the development of critical literacy and numeracy skills and they need to continue peer group interaction to develop critical social and emotional skills.

But let’s get back to Sweden. For herd immunity to occur in Stockholm alone, there would need to be 690,000 people infected or 67 times the number of recorded or diagnosed cases to date with a death rate at 0.005 per cent.

Herd immunity in Stockholm in weeks? It seems most unlikely.

The Swedes undertook their unusual approach to the pandemic not on the basis of reducing economic hardship but because their health experts genuinely believed that it offered the best possible health outcomes for the Swedish people.

What is clear is, Sweden’s barrackers have got the first part of the equation wrong. Sweden is headed for a similar size descent in economic activity despite not mandating lockdowns or social distancing.

The second part of the equation, the development of a regionally restricted herd immunity is as yet to be seen but in the unlikely event that it does come, it will have come with at least as much economic misery as there is anywhere around the world.

This column was first published in The Australian 15 May 2020

130 Comments

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    Interesting comments on the article in today’s Australian regarding Drew Pavlou and the University of Queensland matter. I must say I have the greatest concerns about UQ. But what I find interesting is that so many of the comments assume he is right wing and bag ‘the Left’. Yet he identifies as being left wing himself.

  • Boa says:

    Thise buzarre tweets of Trump’s re Joe Scarborough are beyond outrageous from the POTUS. Has he gone completely mad? It will be a tragic day for America if he gets re-elected.
    Who is Biden going to select to run as VP? That could be crucial for his chances.

  • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

    Tracy – re your earlier comment, I did reply but it’s disappeared out into the bloggerverse somewhere. I haven’t seen the series but I do have the book by Andrew Chaikin that it was based on. Was looking forward very much to the SpaceX launch this morning but it got canned due to bad weather. Now due for Sunday. It really needs to work.

  • Bella says:

    God I hope you’re wrong.

  • Boa says:

    Just watching another traincrash of an presser with WA Health authority. Seriously if I closed my eyes it would be like a replay of Hazzard after the RubyP. ”We need to learn the lesson. Having a temperature could have been anything – even just the flu”. Jesus. Anyone, anyone coming in to this country from overseas with a temperature IS definitely potentially COVID-19 positive.
    I just don’t believe the ineptitude

    • Bella says:

      I don’t believe it either Boa & Mark McGowan has every right to be angry. He’s managed to do a great job protecting his state under pressure from a previous ship that wouldn’t leave. Maybe this is payback from the inept Feds for Labor’s stance on border closures. Nothing would surprise me anymore.

  • The Outsider says:

    Hey Jack,

    I was doing a random Google search and just realised that you’re back blogging – I’m pretty sure that it’s been much longer than a year since I last contributed. I hope that things are good for you, health-wise.

    My health news hasn’t been so great, as I was diagnosed with diabetes (Type 2) and then Parkinson’s last year. Anyway, at least I’ll be able to make good (artificially sweetened and shaken) cocktails.

    Over the past couple of years, I’ve been following American politics much more closely than Australian politics. Even though it’s been more than three years now, it still astounds me that there’s a significant chunk of America that supports Trump.

    The early COVID days were crazy. I remember staying in Batemans Bay just before social distancing started. There was a note in our hotel room bathroom advising us to go easy on the loo paper!

    The social distancing vs economy argument is a complex one, which Australia seems to be managing well, so far. My child went back to school this week. We’ve largely followed the ACT health advisories, although the wife thinks we should be doing more. I’ll be glad when things go back to normal. One of the good things that’s come out of this, though, is the realisation that people can actually work fairly effectively from home – obviously not in all situations – and this may be the model post COVID.

    The other thing I’ve discovered is Spotify – it’s great to be able to tell a speaker: “OK Google, play 21st Century Schizoid Man” and it will!

    Cheers all

    TO

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Good to hear from you, TO.

    • Trivalve says:

      Hi TO. Sorry to hear of your health issues, good to hear that your musical taste has not been affected (I wonder if Voltaire agrees though?) I was saying to my son yesterday that one of the things I like about Spotify is that I can catch up on bands/artistes that I couldn’t afford to follow back in the day – unless you (or your generous parents) were loaded, the record collection had to be limited and some outfits simply missed out on my appreciation. Now you can just search on virtually anything and up it comes. Or troll your own back catlogue without the scratches.

      That’s two things.
      Cheers

      • The Outsider says:

        Thanks, Trivalve.

        You’re absolutely right about Spotify opening up acts that you missed during Uni etc. A friend of mine who died recently was an ardent Deadhead, so I decided to find out what was so good about them. I reckon now that Jerry Garcia is an amazing musician. I’ve similarly “discovered” other acts through Spotify. The amazing thing about Spotify is that if you ask it to play a particular song, it seems to know the type of music that you want to hear at a particular time.

        • Trivalve says:

          I just wish they’d stopped him from singing out of tune on studio recordings, or tried until they got it right. It’s like they just didn’t care!

    • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

      “Anyway, at least I’ll be able to make good (artificially sweetened and shaken) cocktails.”

      You are a funny dude! Glad to see your sense of humour is intact! Good to see you again.

    • wraith says:

      There has been a lot of research into Parkinsons of late. Do some homework and find good doctors.
      Much love and hope to you.

    • voltaire says:

      Nice to hear from you – & very sorry to hear about the health issues.

      Sounds as if, you too, may have been absent from the bridgetable for an extended period?

      Let me know if you are passing through Sydney….
      cheers

      • The Outsider says:

        Thanks, Voltaire.

        Funnily enough, I’ve played more bridge online this year than I’ve played in the entire last decade, or so. It’s a lot easier to do it from home than to make the effort to go to the club or congresses.

        You should get back into it, too.

        It would be good to catch up, either in Sydney or Canberra.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      You are in a very good spot to deal with both conditions, TO. Canberra has an excellent health service. World class. Stick with it and let the smart people help you manage it.

    • The Outsider says:

      Thanks everyone for your kind wishes.

      My GP tells me that my neurologist is the best one in Canberra for dealing with Parkinson’s, so that’s a plus. The main thing about the disease is that it can’t be cured, only controlled. The good news is that I’m responding to the dopamine I take daily, but my neurologist says there will come a time when I stop responding. The wife and my sister are keen for me to do a lot of homeopathic stuff, which I sometimes do to keep them quiet. Anyway, having Parkinson’s has given me a bit of impetus to plan to do things a bit sooner than otherwise, which is a good thing.

  • BASSMAN says:

    John L, Dwight, The Toaster and others need to do some reading on the USA’s imperialism. A good place to start would be Brian Toohey’s new book, Secret: The Makings of Australia’s Security State. There is a wealth of evidence, well researched with checkable footnotes which are many times more reliable than what you are reading on Facebook. You people don’t seem to care governments (especially conservative) have taken advantage of the war on/of terror to strengthen their ability to suppress unwelcome disclosure and keep the people in the dark about their activities-especially military. Dutton is at it again I see. It is little wonder that we have been described as the most secretive democracy in the western world. We have passed more anti-terror laws than even the USSR! Laws which have hardly ever been used.

    • Dwight says:

      Let’s start from a basic question: do you believe that in the main the USA tries to make the world a better place? If you disagree, no amount of citations or appeals to authority will matter.

    • John L says:

      Bassy, the US has been a super power and has flexed its muscles many times.
      They may be bad but the Chinese model is far far worse.
      As to the anti-terror laws in Australia, is there enough checks and balances to ensure that they are not abused?
      I have no idea.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      You’re deflecting BASSY. A clear indication you’re taking the great leap backward. The earlier comments related to China. You may not be aware that your man Xi is actively limiting discussions about Mao. Now why would that be? You probably don’t have Mao’s stats in your notebook, but historians all agree he was in the BIG league of twentieth century murders. All his own citizens too.

  • Boa says:

    Interesting that we have the same argument between Pirts and Health in WA now. Are the ships’ captains deliberately misleading them to be able to berth?

  • Dwight says:

    Indulge me, please. I opined before about systemic thinking–I once threw out a complete curriculum in organizational change to deal with it. If I bump into those old students, they still remark positively on the experience. Let me give you a quick example.

    Probably 15 years ago, I pointed out to my students I pointed out that the average age of cars in Australia was 2-3 years more than New Zealand. Why?

    Tariffs. As it was more expensive to buy a new car here, on a relative basis, Aussies hung on to them longer. Once problem, older cars are less safe, and less likely to have the newest emissions equipment. So a new industry was created by bad government policy: road worthiness certificates.

    That was bad enough. But being that there was no plan in sight to eliminate the tariffs, in 2010 Labor introduced the “cash for clunkers” scheme. Because our cars were older, less safe and polluted more, another government scheme to get them off the road.

    See the system, not the symptom.

    • Mack the Knife says:

      Correctomundo Dwight. The price of used European cars in NZ are around 30% lower than here, in NZ dollars! Exactly for the reasons you describe. Tariffs are supposed to be protection for local industry, that didn’t stop the Keating government for putting them on motor cycles, where there is no local manufacturer. Now Holden and Ford no longer manufacture 4 door sedans, tariffs on those vehicles should be abolished. We could be driving clean, green Euro vehicles at affordable prices. I won’t be holding my breath. The ratchet which was formally applied to Labo(u)r now applies to both sides of politics, the conservatives don’t even bother to try and turn it back.

    • Trivalve says:

      There’s a lot of inaccuracy in that post, Dwight. Too much to bother sorting out.

    • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

      “There is a simple rule here, a rule of legislation, a rule of business, a rule of life: beyond a certain point, complexity is fraud. You can apply that rule to left-wing social programs, but you can also apply that rule to credit derivatives, hedge funds, all the rest of it”
      – P.J. O’Rourke

      Australia doesn’t have a Military-Industrial Complex; it has a Bureaucratic-Legal Complex. Our whole country is now geared to serving the interests of public administrators and lawyers. It’s done by means of convincing the electorate that the solution to every problem lies with government; then public servants design “solutions” that rarely work as advertised but do employ a lot of public servants and create a lot of poorly written laws; the bad laws then create work for lawyers who keep enormous numbers of cases churning through the tribunals and courts (creating more jobs for the lawyers who run them); thus necessitating more government action to design “solutions” . . . etc etc.

      The main mechanism in all of this is artificial complexity. If it sometimes looks like our politicians have no idea what they’re own departments are doing – and they seem to get caught out by bureaucratic spot-fires on a daily basis – it’s because nobody does. What we do know is that bureaucracies keep getting bigger, our body of laws is swelling inexorably, public administration costs never go down and no citizen is fully aware of the encyclopedias-worth of laws to which they are subject and which they might unknowingly breach at any time.

  • Razor says:

    All this doom and gloom people! Across the world poverty has never been less. Infant mortality is at historic low levels across the third world. We have never produced more food, yet on less land. There are more forests today than there were in the 1930’s. Technology and innovation across all disciplines has never been greater! Education levels in emerging countries is accelerating exponentially. That’s what happens when kids can read at night time due to having electricity mostly using coal fired power. Your loathing of the human race is self indulgent and simply based on what you can see from your kitchen window’s. The macro view is great, so don’t sweat the micro. Humans have adapted to changing circumstances since our history began, if in fact some of the circumstances as portrayed by certain interest groups are actually changing. None of the doom saying of the last 100 years has ever come true. Smell the roses fellow bloggers you are alive and generations of your offspring will survive.

    • Dwight says:

      Excellent. The average poor person today has a longer expected lifespan, in better health, than the Tudor kings.

    • John L says:

      Not loathing the human race Razor,
      Just looking at all the problems and concluding that something will have to give vey shortly.
      I actually do not think the Macro view is great. We are at peak about everything.
      Resources that were measured in thousand of years a century ago are now measured in centuries or less.
      The human race will survive but not in the numbers predicted.
      I am not to sure how much bio-diversity there will be though.

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