Americans Believe 24 and Under Are 8% of COVID Deaths. The Real Share Is 0.1%

The narcissism of the social media generation, they have to make everything about them, even deaths of 85+ year olds

18 to 24-year olds are almost as nearly as concerned for their death and serious health consequences from the corona flu as those 65 and above

Our Fixed Income CIO Sonal Desai unveils the first insights from the new Franklin Templeton–Gallup research project on the behavioral response to the COVID-19 pandemic and implications for the recovery: we find a gross misperception of COVID-19 risk, driven by partisanship and misinformation, and a willingness to pay a significant “safety premium” that could affect future inflation. The first round of our Franklin Templeton–Gallup Economics of Recovery Study has already yielded three powerful and surprising insights:

  1. Americans still misperceive the risks of death from COVID-19 for different age cohorts—to a shocking extent;
  2. The misperception is greater for those who identify as Democrats, and for those who rely more on social media for information; partisanship and misinformation, to misquote Thomas Dolby, are blinding us from science; and
  3. We find a sizable “safety premium” that could become a significant driver of inflation as the recovery gets underway.

MISPERCEPTIONS OF RISK

Six months into this pandemic, Americans still dramatically misunderstand the risk of dying from COVID-19:

    1. On average, Americans believe that people aged 55 and older account for just over half of total COVID-19 deaths; the actual figure is 92%.
    2. Americans believe that people aged 44 and younger account for about 30% of total deaths; the actual figure is 2.7%.
    3. Americans overestimate the risk of death from COVID-19 for people aged 24 and younger by a factor of 50; and they think the risk for people aged 65 and older is half of what it actually is (40% vs 80%).

These results are nothing short of stunning. Mortality data have shown from the very beginning that the COVID-19 virus age-discriminates, with deaths overwhelmingly concentrated in people who are older and suffer comorbidities. This is perhaps the only uncontroversial piece of evidence we have about this virus. Nearly all US fatalities have been among people older than 55; and yet a large number of Americans are still convinced that the risk to those younger than 55 is almost the same as to those who are older.

SHARE OF COVID-19 DEATHS BY AGE: BELIEFS VS. DATA

Estimates of the distribution of COVID-19 deaths reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

This misperception translates directly into a degree of fear for one’s health that for most people vastly exceeds the actual risk: we find that the share of people who are very worried or somewhat worried of suffering serious health consequences should they contract COVID-19 is almost identical across all age brackets between 25 and 64 years old, and it’s not far below the share for people 65 and older.

The discrepancy with the actual mortality data is staggering: for people aged 18–24, the share of those worried about serious health consequences is 400 times higher than the share of total COVID deaths; for those age 25–34 it is 90 times higher. The chart below truly is worth a thousand words:

FEAR OF HEALTH CONSEQUENCES FROM COVID-19 VS. ACTUAL MORTALITY DATA, BY AGE BRACKET 

Share of respondents worried for serious health effects from coronavirus compared to deaths reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Our question asks about fear of serious health consequences, not fear of death, but the evidence to-date indicates that the two follow a very similar age distribution; indeed the CDC has clearly stated on its website that “Among adults, the risk of severe illness from COVID-19 increases with age, with older adults at the highest risk.” Recent concerns of possible adverse long-term consequences are by necessity speculative, since we obviously do not have long-term data yet.

PARTISANSHIP AND SOCIAL MEDIA

For the last six months, we have all read and talked about nothing but COVID-19; how can there be still such a widespread, fundamental misunderstanding of the basic facts? Our poll results identify two major culprits: the quality of information and the extreme politicization of the COVID-19 debate:

  • People who get their information predominantly from social media have the most erroneous and distorted perception of risk.
  • Those who identify as Democrats tend to mistakenly overstate the risk of death from COVID-19 for younger people much more than Republicans.

This, sadly, comes as no surprise. Fear and anger are the most reliable drivers of engagement; scary tales of young victims of the pandemic, intimating that we are all at risk of dying, quickly go viral; so do stories that blame everything on your political adversaries. Both social and traditional media have been churning out both types of narratives in order to generate more clicks and increase their audience.

The fact that the United States is in an election year has exacerbated the problem. Stories that emphasize the dangers of the pandemic to all age cohorts and tie the risk to the Administration’s handling of the crisis likely tend to resonate much more with Democrats than Republicans. This might be a contributing factor to why, in our survey results, Democrats tend to overestimate the risk of dying from COVID-19 for different age cohorts to a greater extent than Republicans do.

Our susceptibility to how the information is presented also plays a role. The same data can be portrayed in different forms on a graph—some reassuring and some alarming. Our study finds that how the data are presented has a very strong impact on people’s attitudes. For example, respondents who were shown COVID-19 case trends for Texas and Florida in isolation were much less willing to reopen schools and businesses than those who were shown the same trends compared to New York. And more alarming graphics tend to be used more frequently, as they generate greater engagement.

Note: Rate expressed as deaths per million residents

This misinformation has a very concrete adverse impact. Our study results show that those who overstate deaths among young people are more cautious about making purchases, more reluctant to travel, and favor keeping businesses and schools shut.

Here again, we find a significant difference across partisan lines. According to our study, political affiliation is as powerful as age in predicting whether someone would be likely to eat at a restaurant indoors; Democrats have roughly the same willingness to eat in a restaurant at 25% capacity as Republicans do in a restaurant at full capacity. Individual risk from COVID-19 depends on age and health, but perceived risk depends on one’s politics— and it’s perceived risk that drives behavior. Conversely, previous Gallup research has found that Republicans have been less likely to accept public health guidelines like wearing a mask, regardless of the local rate of infection—again evidence that partisanship plays an important role.

This misinformation also causes another fundamental problem. The policy decision of what activities to keep shut and for how long is a very difficult and consequential one. It requires balancing two opposite effects of uncertain scale: on the one hand the benefits in terms of slowing COVID-19 contagion, on the other hand the harm to the economy and to people’s long-term health and livelihoods. This decision is strongly influenced by public perceptions of dangers, not only because politicians are sensitive to the public’s concerns but also because politicians are people too, subject to some of the same biases. Our poll results suggest fundamental misperceptions of the risk of death or serious adverse health consequences from COVID-19 could be distorting these decisions.

THE “SAFETY PREMIUM” AND INFLATION PROSPECTS

Everything has a price. In several industries, resuming activity while limiting contagion risk implies extra costs or reducing the number of customers. The extent to which these costs will be passed on to consumers in higher prices will depend—among other things—on the extent to which people are willing to pay for the extra safety. To test this, in our poll we asked people “Assume you are purchasing a plane ticket for personal travel for $500. Would you be willing to pay the following extra amounts to ensure an empty seat next to you?” The results are striking:

  • About half of our respondents would be willing to pay up to $100 more, a 20% price increase;
  • Between a quarter and a third of respondents would be willing to pay up to an additional $150, a 30% price increase;
  • Between one in ten and one in three of our respondents would be willing to pay an additional $250, a full 50% price increase; and
  • The more often people fly, the more willing they are to pay extra.

A prolonged recession would depress incomes and demand, but a combination of bankruptcies and safety requirements might cause a corresponding cut in supply. If those who can afford it are willing to pay significantly more for extra perceived safety, we might see a significant rise in inflation down the line. And, higher inflation would further exacerbate the rise in inequality caused by the recession.

RESPONDENTS WERE ASKED: ASSUME YOU ARE PURCHASING A PLANE TICKET FOR PERSONAL TRAVEL FOR $500. WOULD YOU BE WILLING TO PAY THE FOLLOWING EXTRA AMOUNTS TO ENSURE AN EMPTY SEAT NEXT TO YOU?

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IMPLICATIONS

We launched this joint project to gain a deeper insight into people’s behavioral response to the pandemic, because we believe it will play a crucial role in shaping the economic recovery. Our first round of polls has already yielded surprising insights that raise some concern for the outlook, but also highlight important calls to action.

From a public interest perspective, we believe the top priority should be better information and a less partisan, more fact-based public debate. It is shocking that six months into the pandemic so many people still ignore the basic mortality statistics, with perceived risk driven by political leanings rather than individual age and health. Misperceptions of risk distort both individual behavior and policy decisions.

The fact that a large share of the population overestimates the COVID-19 danger to the young will make a targeted public health response more difficult to agree on. We think it is also likely to delay the recovery, causing a deeper and prolonged recession.

Our first results also reveal that people will be willing to pay a significant premium for safety. Combined with a likely hit to supply from the pandemic, this might give an unexpected boost to inflation somewhere down the line. Policymakers should be mindful of this for several reasons, one being that it might exacerbate the rise of inequality from a pandemic that already discriminates against the most vulnerable workers (concentrated in the hardest- hit service sectors) and disadvantaged children (through prolonged school closures). In our view, investors should also start thinking about the impact of inflation reawakening from a decades-long slumber.

Stay tuned for our next round of results and insights.

Source: Franklin Templeteon

16 Comments
  1. Muhammad Abbass says

    This article still contains a fair amount of false propaganda. There is little to no risk for most people from this thing. The over-counting of deaths and of infections is universal. There are many reports both from health care workers and officially about this. As for the conclusions it contains and the reasons for the discrepancies, this article is mostly nonsense. This is because it is looking at the event specifically as an American problem and using specifically American examples as the cause. Few of these correlate with other nations yet the same misconceptions appear to be universal.

    I would conclude by suggesting the reason for the confusion and extremely exaggerated fear is not merely media but the entire spectrum of politicians, “experts” medical systems and all backed up by and reported by a media which shows no skepticism or interest in verifying anything coming from these groups. Not forgetting Silicon Valley which is working feverishly to silence and censor any rational voices and information which would serve to reduce people’s fear and truthful information about it. ironically that will include this article despite the fact it basically tows the line on the whole disgusting hoax. Anti-Empire? LOL. My fat aunt it is!

    1. cechas vodobenikov says

      utter stupidity—very few Covid deaths are attributed to covid in many nations that never declared martial law

  2. disqus_3BrONUAJno says

    Do not be deceived by the title of the video. It is about the entire pharmaceutical scam.
    You should watch it while you can, before it is taken down.
    https://cetv.one/programs/p

  3. cechas vodobenikov says

    idiots that believe astrology is scientific and ghosts exist will believe anything told by their ruling class

    1. Le Ruse says

      I don’t believe in Ghosts ! But…They do frighten me ..

      1. Muhammad Abbass says

        They fascinate me.

    2. Muhammad Abbass says

      Anything relying on observation and which is consistent with it, IS SCIENTIFIC. Science is a process not a DOGMA. Astrology falls into this category. I have observed its efficacy if one ignores the populist BS which is commonly bandied about as if it some predictive tool. This belief does not in any correlate with this hoax Plandemic. There is nobody more skeptical or possibly informed about this BS I began the opposite but my own observations since have turned this around. I am also not dismissive of astrology because I have had a number of demonstrations of its reality. I’ve since come to learn more about it and anyone who rejects it out of hand is simply uninformed. For that matter ghosts do exist. So do off planet visitors. The last one I’m very certain of since I’ve had a few close encounters and something else in my time in the army. Anyone who writes off so many things when they obviously don’t have the information to judge, is unlikely to be on the right side of anything scientific except by accident. Or ideology. You’ll be as easily fooled when things are presented in a way which appeals to your ideology. IE: Your chosen ruling class.

      1. cechas vodobenikov says

        —not one astronomer believes astrology is scientific…..your insecurity and passivity is obvious—Adorno described astrology as a cult of insecurity/Passivity…dimwitted superstitious idiot

  4. voza0db says

    just another Pro-OPERATION COVID propaganda!

    1. Le Ruse says

      You mean Operation COVIDIOT propaganda ?

      1. voza0db says

        Any real variation of that slogan is acceptable. I write in my native language CUVID, because CU means ass!

        1. Le Ruse says

          Yupp Like we say , Et mon cul c’est du poulet ?

  5. rik pieters says

    you guys still don’t know what’s really going on, Gates has bought souveraineté to do with us what he thinks is best. That’s why all of our governments act so weird.

    1. cechas vodobenikov says

      false equivalence …apparently u have never lived in a civilized nation

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