With governments across Europe reopening their economies for business, it’s a good moment to look back on the different paths taken to control Covid-19 outbreaks to try to see how effective they were.
The chart below shows the relative severity of Europe’s restrictions based on work done by the University of Oxford’s Blavatnik School of Government, which tracks a range of measures and scores how stringent they’ve been each step of the way.
Stringency index
More restrictions
No cases
Dec. 31
China announces the
outbreak of an unknown
SARS-like pneumonia
Country reports at least one case
WHO declares a pandemic
France
Germany
Finland
Italy
Sweden
U.K.
Spain
Belgium
Austria
Switzerland
Greece
Norway
Denmark
Netherlands
Ireland
Portugal
Hungary
Dec. 31
Feb.
March
April
May
Stringency index
No cases
Dec. 31
China announces the
outbreak of an unknown
SARS-like pneumonia
Country reports
at least one case
WHO declares
a pandemic
France
Germany
Finland
Italy
Sweden
U.K.
Spain
Belgium
Austria
Switzerland
Greece
Norway
Denmark
Netherlands
Ireland
Portugal
Hungary
Dec. 31
Feb.
March
April
May
Stringency index
More restrictions
No cases
Dec. 31
China announces the outbreak of
an unknown SARS-like pneumonia
WHO declares
a pandemic
France
Germany
Finland
Italy
Sweden
U.K.
Spain
Belgium
Austria
Switzerland
Greece
Norway
Denmark
Netherlands
Ireland
Portugal
Hungary
Dec. 31
Feb.
March
April
May
Stringency
index
More restrictions
No cases
Dec. 31
China announces the
outbreak of an unknown
SARS-like pneumonia
WHO declares
a pandemic
France
Germany
Finland
Italy
Sweden
U.K.
Spain
Belgium
Austria
Switzerland
Greece
Norway
Denmark
Netherlands
Ireland
Portugal
Hungary
Dec. 31
Feb.
March
April
May
While not a gauge of whether the decisions taken were the right ones, nor of how strictly they were followed, the analysis gives a clear sense of each government’s strategy for containing the virus. Some — above all Italy and Spain — enforced prolonged and strict lockdowns after infections took off. Others — especially Sweden — preferred a much more relaxed approach. Portugal and Greece chose to close down while cases were relatively low. France and the U.K. took longer before deciding to impose the most restrictive measures.
But, as our next chart shows, there’s little correlation between the severity of a nation’s restrictions and whether it managed to curb excess fatalities — a measure that looks at the overall number of deaths compared with normal trends.
Mortality
Preliminary
England
Extremely
high excess
mortality
Sweden
Italy
Normal range
Berlin, Germany
Week
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Jan
Feb
March
April
May
Spain
Belgium
France
Netherlands
Switzerland
Portugal
Austria
Greece
Norway
Finland
Denmark
Hungary
Mortality
Preliminary
England
Extremely
high excess
mortality
Sweden
Italy
Normal range
Berlin, Germany
Week
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Jan
Feb
March
April
May
Spain
Belgium
France
Netherlands
Switzerland
Portugal
Austria
Greece
Norway
Finland
Denmark
Hungary
Mortality
Preliminary
England
Extremely
high excess
mortality
Sweden
Italy
Normal range
Berlin, Germany
Week
1
5
9
13
17
Jan
Feb
March
April
May
Spain
Belgium
France
Netherlands
Switzerland
Portugal
Austria
Greece
Norway
Finland
Denmark
Hungary
Mortality
Preliminary
England
Extremely
high excess
mortality
Sweden
Italy
Normal
range
Berlin,
Germany
Week
1
5
9
13
17
Jan
Feb
March
April
May
Spain
Belgium
France
Netherlands
Switzerland
Portugal
Austria
Greece
Norway
Finland
Denmark
Hungary
In Europe, roughly three groups of countries emerge in terms of fatalities. One group, including the U.K., the Netherlands and Spain, experienced extremely high excess mortality. Another, encompassing Sweden and Switzerland, suffered many more deaths than usual, but significantly less than the first group. Finally, there were countries where deaths remained within a normal range such as Greece and Germany.
Yet the data show that the relative strictness of a country’s containment measures had little bearing on its membership in any of the three groups above. While Germany had milder restrictions than Italy, it has been much more successful in containing the virus.
The overall impression is that while restrictions on movement were seen as a necessary tool to halt the spread of the virus, when and how they were wielded was more important than their severity. Early preparation, and plentiful health-care resources, were enough for several countries to avoid draconian lockdowns. Germany, with better testing and contact tracing and more intensive care units than its neighbors, could afford to keep the economy a bit more open. Greece, by acting quickly and surely, appears to have avoided the worst, so far.
As one would expect, the countries with the most intense lockdowns look likely to suffer the most economically. What’s not clear yet is how much economic benefit countries with relatively lax curbs really stand to gain, given the integrated and trade-driven nature of the European economy. The export-led Swedish economy is set to shrink 7% this year, its government said on Tuesday. Germany, whose economy was shrinking before the pandemic, is already in recession. These countries may bounce back earlier than others next year, but this is a painful moment for all.
Industrial production
Change Feb to March
+20%
Ireland
+10
Greece
Trend
Finland
Norway
0
Netherlands
Sweden
Denmark
–10
Hungary
Portugal
Germany
Spain
France
–20
Italy
–30
0
20
40
60
80
100
Stringency index
March median
Industrial production
Change Feb to March
+20%
Ireland
+10
Trend
Greece
Finland
Norway
0
Denmark
Sweden
Netherlands
–10
Hungary
Portugal
Germany
Spain
France
–20
Italy
–30
0
20
40
60
80
100
Stringency index
March median
Industrial production
Change Feb to March
+20%
Ireland
+10
Greece
Trend
Finland
Norway
0
Denmark
Sweden
Netherlands
Portugal
–10
Hungary
Germany
Spain
France
–20
Italy
–30
0
20
40
60
80
100
Stringency index
March median
The economic data for the lockdown period are only just appearing, and they may be revised substantially in the future given the obvious difficulties of collecting data during a pandemic. Regardless, what the past few months suggest is that the economic cost is not the only downside to a draconian lockdown. The Covid-19 experience has taught us that it’s far better to respond quickly and smartly, with the right technology and mass testing and tracing, rather than only relying on the crudest of shutdowns. If there are second waves of the virus, we shouldn’t repeat the mistakes of the first.