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        <title><![CDATA[Other Way to Replace the Lockdown Strategy in the COVID-19 crisis]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Other Way to Replace the Lockdown Strategy in the COVID-19 crisis</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> An obviously better solution than sinking the world economy into a great depression is a greater use of “laissez-faire”.</p><p>The current coronavirus strategy of most governments is a recipe for a  worldwide economic disaster. In many countries, the strategy of  confinement and forcing shops to close is a sure-fire path to  large-scale business failures. The cascade of economic and financial  repercussions to come is likely to lead to another Great Depression.</p><h2 id="link-0">The Costs of Prolongation&nbsp;</h2><p>Italy, for example, already had a 135 percent debt-to-GDP ratio 
before the crisis. It is hard to imagine how it will be able to borrow 
more without a commitment from other European countries to jointly be 
responsible for more Italian debt—something the northern European 
countries are still strongly opposed to. The ECB is already printing 
money like crazy, and another <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_government-debt_crisis">Greece-like situation</a> will make it ramp up the printing presses even more. We have been down 
this path many times before, where the cure is clearly much worse than 
the disease. <a href="https://dailyhistory.org/What_Were_the_Causes_of_Germany%27s_Hyperinflation_of_1921-1923%3F">The German hyperinflation of 1921-1923</a> created a resentful, impoverished middle class which ultimately led to Hitler’s rise to power.</p><p>The coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) that originated in China is highly contagious. More than 80 percent of the patients <a href="https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-8134929/More-80-coronavirus-patients-mild-symptoms.html">show only mild flu-like symptoms</a> but for the remaining 20 percent, mostly the elderly or people with  preexisting conditions, the virus can be life-threatening. To save lives  short term, the entire population in Europe is currently being held  under house arrest and many businesses have been put into a  pre-liquidation state by no longer being able to realize a profit due to  inactivity.</p><p>The current strategy is not to stop the virus in its tracks but to 
spread out the contagion so that the peak is a level that will be more 
manageable for the health care system. Governments took the biased 
advice of health care professionals without a real weighing of all the 
pros and cons. This prolongation in time, however, will come at a steep 
economic and human cost.</p><h2 id="link-1">Unemployment Correlates with Death</h2><p>In the longer term, more lives will be lost if we continue this 
strategy. How many victims of financial ruin will end their own lives? 
In the modern era, for every one percent increase in the unemployment 
rate, there has typically been an increase of about one percent in the 
number of suicides. A study conducted by Brenner in 1979<sup>1</sup>, 
found that for every 10 percent increase in the unemployment rate, 
mortality increased by 1.2 percent, cardiovascular disease by 1.7 
percent, cirrhosis of the liver by 1.3 percent, suicides by 1.7%, 
arrests by 4 percent, and reported assaults by 0.8 percent (<a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20071025150953/http://ashleymac.econ.vt.edu/ashley/3204/brenner.pdf">see here</a>). How many lost lives out of 300 million in the USA does a 10 percent, 15 percent, 20 percent unemployment rate represent?&nbsp;</p><p>The use of the free market gives another strategy to control the 
spread of the coronavirus. For example, we now have strong evidence from
 trials in France and China that in 75 percent of the cases a 
combination of two extremely well-known antimalarial drugs&nbsp;(<a href="https://www.france24.com/en/20200320-will-an-old-malaria-drug-help-fight-the-coronavirus">hydroxychloroquine</a> in combination with the antibiotic azithromycin)&nbsp;can bring the viral load down to nearly zero&nbsp;<a href="https://www.france24.com/en/20200320-will-an-old-malaria-drug-help-fight-the-coronavirus">after just six days</a> (complications usually arrive after the 6th day). These drugs could 
make the latent effects of the Wuhan virus as mild for 20 percent as the
 other 80 percent, and they were recently <a href="https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/coronavirus-fda-chloroquine-emergency-use/575097/">cleared for use</a>.</p><p>There are many other possible drug combinations that might offer  similar results, but FDA and EMA regulations requiring long term testing  make it much more difficult for these drugs to be available in time to  treat the virus. Yet the world economy is at stake and we cannot sit and  argue on the quality of the water while our house is burning down.</p><p>An obviously better solution than sinking the world economy into a 
great depression is a greater use of “laissez-faire.” The current 
lockdown strategy is a bleak choice of (allegedly) fewer short term 
deaths against a much larger long-term death toll. We must return to a 
business-as-normal situation as soon as possible. We need to free drugs 
from overbearing drug regulations and make them widely available (with 
appropriate dosages and warnings) everywhere at a market price without 
the need for a prescription. We need markets to be free so they can 
provide a wide choice of medications.</p><h2 id="link-2">Market-Oriented Strategy</h2><p>The argument is not for a non-strategy; it is for allowing the 
markets to define the strategy. For example, the elderly might consider 
taking chloroquine preventively; it has a long history of being taken to
 prevent malaria in Africa. It is naïve to think that people can’t 
inform themselves and take appropriate actions for their own health 
benefits.</p><p>It is also naïve to think that businesses and people won’t adapt to 
the perceived threat. Restaurants can seat patrons several meters apart.
 Waiters and cooks can wear masks and gloves. There is an infinite 
number of innovative ways people will adjust. Just because we cannot 
imagine a voluntary market solution does not mean one does not exist. <a href="https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/03/coronavirus-cases-have-dropped-sharply-south-korea-whats-secret-its-success">South Korea</a> is an example to emulate. Instead of an authoritarian locking down of 
its people, it took a much more libertarian approach to the problem and 
is already showing promising results.</p><p>This market-oriented strategy is obviously not without risks, but we 
must move away from the current defensive 16th-century bunker mentality 
and consider less disastrous economic alternatives.</p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[GAGmen]]></dc:creator>
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