A Twist of History

October 8, 2023

by Stephen Stofka

This week’s letter examines the deployment of the COVID-19 vaccine in 2021 and the passage of the 3rd stimulus plan on March 11, 2021, six weeks after President Biden took office. This past week Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology for their work in developing the mRNA vaccine. Republicans have blamed Biden and that stimulus as being a major contributor to inflation, claiming that the government handed out too much purchasing power as the economy was recovering. We tell history in hindsight so that it has what statisticians call a survivorship bias. At each point in the narrative there were several possibilities that did not happen.

Biden came into office just weeks after protesters, spurred on by Trump’s rhetoric of “We fight like hell,” stormed the Capitol. Many businesses, deemed non-essential, remained closed. Despite two large stimulus payments and several relief plans, GDP growth in the fourth quarter was flat at just 0.56% annualized. Like any President coming into office, Biden wanted to make his mark. With narrow majorities in the House and Senate, his party could steer legislation to the finish line. A third rescue plan was politically feasible and advantageous. Was it economically prudent? In hindsight, we make judgments. Decisions are made in the fog of foresight.

In February 2021, just a few weeks after Biden took office, vaccines first became available to vulnerable populations – seniors and the immunocompromised. There are three phases – Phase 1, 2, 3 – that a drug goes through before approval. Normally, Phase 3 alone takes one – four years. In February 2021 the approved vaccines had been through all three phases in less than a year. The mRNA vaccine was an entirely new development process and had never been approved for human use. In short, there was a lot that could have gone wrong. In addition to those concerns was the possibility that the disease might mutate enough to render some vaccine varieties impotent.

More than a decade earlier Biden had been Vice-President when the administration did not push for enough stimulus. Critics on both sides of the aisle worried that further support programs after the financial crisis would spur inflation. Instead, inflation remained stubbornly low and the economy idled in low gear. Biden was not about to make the same mistake again.

What if the vaccines had not been successful or successful enough to hinder the further spread of Covid? The economy would have remain partially shuttered and people in both parties would have been grateful for the third stimulus, demanding even more stimulus payments and other relief measures. Thankfully, that didn’t happen. We often shape our memories of historical events to confirm our choices and to support our opinions. We cut out those events that contradict the coherence of our narrative. We create a history that has shared elements with others of our political persuasion but each history is unique to us alone. We bring that unique set of memories into the voting booth each election and help create our country’s history.

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Photo by Thomas Kelley on Unsplash

Keywords: stimulus, inflation, Covid-19, vaccine, election

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