From the CBC:
“Politicians who consider
sacrificing the old for the sake of the economy face a backlash: Don Pittis”
Those who say the value of human
life cannot be measured may not know one of the dark secrets of economics. As
we hear about the monstrous death rates from COVID-19 in Italy and Spain, we
must face the fact that whenever there is a cost to keeping people from dying —
whether in traffic accidents or from rare diseases — there is always a
trade-off. According to the calculations of economists, human life does,
indeed, have a price. And after Texas Lt.-Gov. Dan Patrick suggested it may be
time for grandma and grandpa to risk sacrificing themselves for the economy, it
is inevitable that those of us approaching the cut-off date may be getting a
little nervous. "As a senior citizen, are you willing to take a chance on
your survival, in exchange for keeping the America that all America loves for
your children and grandchildren? And if that's the exchange, I'm all in,"
said Patrick, 70, this week in a much-quoted and much-shared clip from Fox
News. It brings to mind Christopher
Buckley's satiric novel Boomsday, in which baby boomers are paid cash up front
to commit to being bumped off when they reach age 75 in order to save money for
younger taxpayers. A character in the 2007 book remarks it's "the fate of
many propositions to begin as heresies and end as truths." If Patrick is
to be taken at his word, suddenly, that economic heresy may be coming to life.
The human life calculator: Of course, reports show the new coronavirus
does not just kill old people. But with
death rates for those who catch it rising with age to as high as one in five
after age 80, there's been a backlash. Essentially,
critics say similar statements by U.S. President Donald Trump — to the effect
that the country needs to go back to work soon to restart the economy — will
likely lead to hundreds of thousands of additional deaths. "We cannot let
the cure be worse than the problem itself," Trump tweeted in capital
letters. As Chris Fievoli from the Canadian Institute of Actuaries said
Wednesday, there is no question in the insurance industry that lives have
measurable value. He recalls working in the 1980s, when the AIDS epidemic was
killing young people, and each young life lost cost the industry more than if
they had been able to grow old. The insurance industry has this handy widget
called the Human Life Value Calculator intended to show how much life insurance
you need, but which also shows a decline in value in senior years.
COVID-19 crisis has brought out
the ageists: Similarly, various
government agencies, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, have
estimates for how much should be spent to protect people from hazards.
According to the New York Times, the EPA's estimate is $9.5 million US per life
saved. In the 1990s, the agency tried to include a provision that the lives of
people over 70 were only worth two-thirds of those of younger people before
being scared off by AARP, the U.S. lobby group for older people. Here in
Canada, Marissa Lennox, chief policy officer for CARP, AARP's northern sister
organization, is outraged by what she sees as an increase in bias against older
people caused by the new pandemic. "I think COVID-19 has brought the
ageists out in force," said Lennox. She deplores the use of the phrase
"boomer remover" that she says has swept social media. Even worse,
she says, some medical authorities around the world are discussing putting an
age limit on who gets treatment, which she sees as an implication that seniors
are expendable. Comments like Trump's and Patrick's, she warns, may be a
slippery slope. "Any rhetoric around sacrificing the 'old' for the sake of
the economy is purely ageist, and it is dangerous," said Lennox.
Caring for the elderly has a cost: As Buckley's satire Boomsday laid out
clearly, caring for the old has a public cost, especially in the U.S. where
pensions remain an unfunded government liability. Here in Canada, most pensions
come out of a fund based on your lifetime contributions. But sacrificing the
weak and old has a cost, too, leaving each of us wondering which group will be
next. "The true measure of any society can be found in how it treats its
most vulnerable members," Indian civil rights leader Mahatma Gandhi
reportedly said, an idea that clearly represents a different kind of economic
calculus. Rather than being based on dollars and cents, it is a social contract
in which the more active and wealthy work to support the more vulnerable. After
all, as Lennox points out, most of us will eventually need the help of a caring
society. "One of the things we love about CARP members is how much they
love their children and their grandchildren," said Lennox. "And I
would hope those children and grandchildren feel the same." But even if
politicians don't care about the idea of a social contract, they may be
inclined to listen, because repeated studies show that old people vote and the
young don't.
^ This is the kind of thinking
the whole world needs right now. Covid-19 has created Covidiots at every level
of society and they need to be ignored – especially when they say we should not
help the elderly or the disabled. The Nazis deemed what a person’s life was
worth and murdered anyone (including the disabled and the elderly) that they
didn’t see value in. The US, Canada and the whole world can not go to the level of the Nazis now or
ever. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/coronavirus-covid-economy-seniors-1.5510079
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