Sweden Shows Lockdowns Were Unnecessary. No Wonder Public Health Officials Hate It

"...to the epidemiologists and officials who staked everything on closing their economies, Sweden is the specter at the feast."

  • “…if Sweden’s strategy was viable, the rest of us ruined ourselves for nothing. That is a disquieting thought, almost an unbearable one. But Sweden forces us to confront it.”
  • “Imagine a world where Stockholm had caved to international pressure and fallen into line with everyone else. In such a world, politicians and public health officials could get away with claiming that but for their closures and crackdowns, things would have been unimaginably worse.”
  • “…to the epidemiologists and officials who staked everything on closing their economies, Sweden is the specter at the feast. There it sits, like Banquo’s ghost, silently rebuking them.”

You know who isn’t worried about a second wave of COVID-19? Sweden. The stolid Scandinavian kingdom has just carried out a record number of COVID-19 tests and found a positive rate of just 1.2%, the lowest since the start of the pandemic. As Sweden’s case rate drops below Norway’s and Denmark’s, those commentators who spent April and May raging against what a Washington Post op-ed called its “experiment with national chauvinism” and predicting colossal fatalities have suddenly gone quiet.

“Sweden has gone from being one of the countries with the most infection in Europe to one of those with the least infection in Europe, while many other countries have seen a rather dramatic increase,” says Anders Tegnell, the state epidemiologist.

True, and it has happened not despite the absence of a lockdown but because of it. Sweden encouraged people to work from home, made university courses remote, and banned meetings of more than 50 people but otherwise trusted its citizens to use their common sense. The authorities judged that since hospitals could cope, there was no need to buy time by ordering people to stay indoors. That judgment has been amply vindicated.

A cause for unalloyed joy, you might think. Here, after all, is proof that a country can contain the coronavirus without depriving children of an education, piling up backlogs of non-coronavirus medical conditions, or leaving a smoking crater where its economy used to be.

But the rest of the world is far from pleased. Indeed, the tone of most foreign media coverage remains affronted, and you can see why. After all, if Sweden’s strategy was viable, the rest of us ruined ourselves for nothing. That is a disquieting thought, almost an unbearable one. But Sweden forces us to confront it.

Imagine a world where Stockholm had caved to international pressure and fallen into line with everyone else. In such a world, politicians and public health officials could get away with claiming that but for their closures and crackdowns, things would have been unimaginably worse. [Because unfortunately for the West other non-lockdown countries like Belarus, Uruguay, Nicaragua, Tanzania, and even South Dakota aren’t actual places.] The disease, they would tell us, would have spread exponentially. Millions, perhaps hundreds of millions, would have died.

But they can’t make that claim when we can all see the control in the experiment. Stockholm’s streets are filled with relaxed people congregating in cafes without face masks. You and I might find those images uplifting, but to the epidemiologists and officials who staked everything on closing their economies, Sweden is the specter at the feast. There it sits, like Banquo’s ghost, silently rebuking them.

The point is not that lockdowns achieved nothing at all. Obviously, if you confine an entire population, you will slow the spread of COVID-19 (and, indeed, of other diseases transmitted by human contact). The point, rather, is that lockdowns were disproportionate and were maintained for far too long.

A new study by economists from the University of Chicago, Princeton, and the London School of Economics finds that a lockdown of less than two months might be justifiable: The economic costs are limited, and the time can be used to build healthcare capacity. “After that,” says Professor Greg Kaplan, one of the authors, “all you’re doing is delaying a second wave, so unless you can hold that lockdown in place all the way until a vaccine arrives, the marginal benefits get smaller and smaller.”

It is amazing how many commentators refuse to understand this point. If you flatten the curve, you don’t reduce the area underneath the curve. Some countries have chosen to string things out for longer than others. But in the absence of a cure or a vaccine, the eventual number of deaths won’t vary much.

That is not to say that it will be the same across different nations. All sorts of factors might affect the mortality rate: climate, geography, population density, age profile, genetics, openness to international travel, incidence of obesity, exposure to past coronaviruses, and, not least, different ways of counting. But the strictness of the lockdown is not high on that list.

The infection and fatality graphs for Sweden and the United Kingdom look almost identical. You would be hard pushed, looking at them, to guess which nation closed its shops, schools, and offices and which did not. Nor is there much correlation when we look at different states in the United States — nor, indeed, in other parts of the world. Peru, which had an eye-wateringly strict lockdown, is faring far worse than neighboring Brazil, whose President Jair Bolsonaro was attacked around the world for his laissez-faire approach.

When all this is over, we may well find that the biggest international variable isn’t the number of preventable deaths. It is the damage to the living.

Source: Washington Examiner

12 Comments
  1. Daniel Goldman says

    Sweden doesn’t engage in mandatory lockdowns, but people still maintained social distancing. What Sweden showed is that people can social distance without being threatened with legal action to do so.

  2. Mike Stevens says

    “As Sweden’s case rate drops below Norway’s and Denmark’s”

    Not quite true… it’s now lower than Denmark’s, (just), but still above Norway and Finland.

    And it’s taken over 7 months for Sweden to eventually fall low enough to claim some sort of parity with the rest of Scandinavia, who all had stricter lockdowns.
    During that time, Sweden’s case rate and mortality has been massively higher than their neighbours, with per capita death tolls up to 10 times higher than Norway for example.
    Overall Sweden’s death rate has been the 11th worst out of 190 other countries.

    And despite the rose tinted glasses that are being used now, Sweden’s economy hasn’t survived totally unscathed… in fact it may have done WORSE than it’s Nordic neighbours..
    …GDP is down for Q2 by 8.6%, as compared to Denmark’s 7.4% fall, and Finland’s 3.2% fall. Norway also fared better than Sweden.
    https://www.businessinsider.com/coronavirus-sweden-gdp-falls-8pc-in-q2-worse-nordic-neighbors-2020-8?r=US&IR=T

    So, it was all pain, and no gain.
    That’s not a lesson for other countries to try and emulate. They need to work out which measures work best, and apply them.
    The Swedes are very sensible and compliant with advice to socially distance and avoid close proximity gatherings.
    Does anyone really think that Americans would be as compliant, when 50% of them are insisting this is all a hoax and demanding freedumb to do exactly what they want?

    1. Mad Hatter says

      Nice blah blah Merck

  3. Mike Stevens says

    So Sweden “trusted its citizens to use their common sense.”
    Well, that strategy wasn’t ever going to work out in many countries, was it?
    …and I’m looking at you, USA.

    1. Vaccine Damaged says

      It didn’t work in Sweden either. 6,000 deaths is nothing to sneeze at in a small country.

  4. Rowdy-Yates says

    One reason is that Sweden adopted 5-G technology as early as 2018 and now Telia a Swedish 5-G tech company is converting Stockholm to a full 5-G based city with 12 others being converted. Sweden did not need to reset its economy. In 2019 Sweden tried to switch to electronic cash overnight and it failed. Estonia is another nation who is very high tech and its restrictions were rather mild. Most ended in June

  5. Jimmy Yost says

    Maybe Swedes don’t watch much TV.

  6. disqus_3BrONUAJno says

    Maybe Swedes take more supplemental vitamin D3 than those in other countries.

    1. Vaccine Damaged says

      Oil in your lungs make COVID-19 worse?

    2. Kirk Patrick says

      Maybe Liberals take more supplemental CNN than those in Sweden.

      1. disqus_3BrONUAJno says

        The dementia of thinking that any source of collectivist propaganda is beneficial would have to be obvious to the few not impaired by it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHl2PqwRcY0

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