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7) If you want to avoid a recession, you have to avoid shutting the country down for months. But to do that you either have to contain it early or give up on containing it. The "ignore it then freak out" approach is the worst of both worlds: it spreads *and* you shut down.
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8) HK and Singapore did a great job here: 1 week of partial shut-down, lots of effectively common sense measures, contained it, and they're still functioning.
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9) China didn't act early enough to have a low-cost intervention, but they did just in time so that a HUGE cost intervention--shutting down for a month--stopped the spreading.
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10) The UK suggested the alternate approach--acknowledge it will spread and just try to contain the impact. But not clear they'll follow through on it given the political blowback, which would leave them in the "chill out, wait no actually freak out" bucket.
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11) There are advantages to "flattening the curve" but I think they're overstated. People are talking about it like it's the solution to COVID-19, but it combines (a) letting it spread with (b) shutting everything down. The impact is blunted a bit, but at a huge cost.
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12) There are also lots of things we probably *should* be doing but aren't. The cost of a recession is HUGE--maybe $100T!!! So spending $100B each on rapidly building hand sanitizer/etc factories, rapidly increasing ventilator capacity, etc. is a small price to pay.
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13) Trump has really bungled this, but he was in a tough place: freak you and you crash the economy, brush it off and you are callous and look obviously wrong in retrospect. He's swinging wildly around looking for an angle that works.
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14) The problem is that the right angle here, and the right speech to give, isn't really in Trump's wheelhouse: it's nuanced and acknowledges tradeoffs and is empathetic.
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15) Bullet points from what I'd have said: a) this will suck b) we have to try to prevent deaths c) we have to try to prevent recession d) we will get through this together
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16) e) announce big stimulus f) announce massive program to provide sanitizer, masks, etc. to everyone g) cover the wages of high-risk or sick people and have them stay home h) temperature checks everywhere
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17) i) massive increase in testing, including heurstic testing (temperature checks, people coming from high risk areas, etc.) j) funds to increase ventilator/hospital capacity k) funds to find a vaccine l) 14d quarantine for people from high-risk area, otherwise open borders
19) But in the end lots of things are better than the status quo: a large % of people get COVID-19, *and* lots of people lose their jobs.
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Replying to and
yeah I've been thinking about can we retool industry for the effort -- won't happen in the west but good to imagine. china built two hospitals in just over a week. we could repurpose college dorms as emergency beds. also manufacturing + tech (iphone apps for reporting / triaging)