NationalReview | To describe as stunning the collapse of a key model the government
has used to alarm the nation about the catastrophic threat of the
coronavirus would not do this development justice.
In a space of just six days starting April 2, two revisions (on April
5 and 8) have utterly discredited the model produced by the University
of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. I wrote about the IHME’s modeling at National Review on Monday,
the day after the first revision — which was dramatic, but pales in
comparison to Wednesday’s reassessment. This was not immediately
apparent because the latest revision (April 8) did not include a side-by-side comparison, as did the April 5
revision. Perusal of the new data, however, is staggering, as is what
it says about government predictions we were hearing just days ago about
the likelihood of 100,000 deaths, with as many as 240,000 a real
possibility.
As I noted in my last post on this subject, by April 5, the
projection of likely deaths had plunged 12 percent in just three days,
93,531 to 81,766. Understand, this projection is drawn from a range; on
April 2, IHME was telling us cumulative COVID-19 deaths could reach as
high as approximately 178,000. The upper range was also reduced on April
5 to about 136,000.
On April 8, the projected cumulative deaths were slashed to 60,145
(with the upper range again cut, to about 126,000). That is, in less
than a week, the model proved to be off by more than 33 percent.
My use of the term “off” is intentional. There is no shortage of
government spin, regurgitated by media commentators, assuring us that
the drastic reductions in the projections over just a few days
powerfully illustrate how well social distancing and the substantial
shuttering of the economy is working. Nonsense. As Alex Berenson points out on Twitter, with an accompanying screenshot data updated by IHME on April 1, the original April 2 model explicitly “assum[ed] full social distancing through May 2020.”
The model on which the government is relying is simply unreliable. It
is not that social distancing has changed the equation; it is that the
equation’s fundamental assumptions are so dead wrong, they cannot remain
reasonably stable for just 72 hours.
And mind you, when we observe that the government is relying on
the models, we mean reliance for the purpose of making policy,
including the policy of completely closing down American businesses and
attempting to confine people to their homes because, it is said, no
lesser measures will do. That seems worth stressing in light of this
morning’s announcement that unemployment claims spiked another 6.6
million (now well over 16 million in just the past couple of weeks), to
say nothing of the fact that, while the nation reels, the Senate has now
chosen to go on recess, having failed, thanks to Democratic obstinacy, to enact legislation to give more relief to our fast-shrinking small-business sector.
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