By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, May 12, 2020
New York is the greatest city in the world. It also is
uniquely suited to the spread of the coronavirus.
As the national debate over reopening continues and the
political blame game intensifies, it’s worth considering the scale of New
York’s outbreak. There is nothing like it anywhere else in the country and
almost nothing like it in the rest of the world.
The story of coronavirus in America is overwhelmingly the
story of coronavirus in New York City and its surrounding suburbs. Any account
of how we got to this place, with deaths nationally headed toward 100,000, must
center on New York City, which was seeded with the virus early and then seeded
much of the rest of the country.
Nearly 20,000 people have died in New York City, or 0.25
percent of the population. If the city were a country, it would rank sixth in
the world in total deaths, behind France and ahead of Brazil.
In New York City, according to a New York Times
report, deaths have been more than 300 percent above normal. In New Jersey,
intimately connected to New York, deaths have been 90 percent above normal.
Otherwise, no other state is close. In the rest of New York State, deaths have
been 9 percent above normal.
The next worst hit state is Massachusetts, with deaths
running nearly 25 percent above normal. There are four other states in the
teens, and the rest are at 10 percent or below, with 14 states below normal.
A Financial Times analysis of hard-hit places has
only Bergamo, Italy, and Guayas, Ecuador, running ahead of New York in
percentage of excess deaths — not Madrid, London, or Île-de-France.
The epidemic started early in New York. According to one
model, the city had its first ten cases at the end of January or by the middle
of February. By the time it had its first confirmed case on March 1, there may
have been as many as 10,000 undetected cases.
The city was getting seeded constantly from abroad. A study
published by medrxiv.org concluded that “introductions from Europe account for
the majority of cases found in NYC in the first weeks of March 2020.” It found
“isolates from Italy, Finland, Spain, France, the U.K., and other European
countries from late February.”
Then, people coming from or through New York spread the
disease elsewhere in the United States. A New York Times analysis found
that the number of cases around the country correlated with how many travelers
arrived from New York in early March.
New York’s connection to the world, especially Europe,
its density, and its mass-transit system all made it a potent vector.
So the question of how we could have kept the U.S. from
getting so hard hit is really how we could have kept New York from getting
so hard hit. Every day counted, and better leadership at the federal, state,
and local levels would have made a difference, but we shouldn’t underestimate
the difficulties. Trump’s early travel restrictions on China would have had to
be imposed on Europe as well, when no one was contemplating that. New York’s
leaders would have had to warn people off the subways, shut the schools, and
torch the Big Apple’s economy before any plainly visible metrics justified it.
This is why the simplistic shots at President Trump, who
indeed should have taken the virus more seriously at the outset, don’t work.
He’s the president of New York, but also of other large, international cities
such as Los Angeles and Miami that have escaped New York’s fate. Has his
leadership been better in those places, or do divergent conditions and local
decisions account for the better outcomes?
None of this, of course, is to disparage New Yorkers.
They have absorbed a gut punch over the past two months with characteristic
grit and bravery. Yet, without New York’s distinctive vulnerability, the course
of the epidemic would look completely different.
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