Why nanny statism matters: evidence from the first wave of COVID-19.

Why nanny statism matters: evidence from the first wave of COVID-19.

Publication date: Jul 23, 2024

A nanny state imposes restrictions on people’s liberty and freedom of action in order to advance their interest and welfare. The extent to which this is desirable, or even ethically acceptable, is debated in the literature. This paper formulates and tests the following hypothesis: the more of a nanny a state has been in the past, the more likely it is that the incumbent government will respond to a new, unknown threat with interventions of a paternalist nature, irrespective of other factors that might contribute to shaping government’s response. This hypothesis is then taken to the data using the first wave of COVID-19 as an empirical test. Data are collected from secondary sources for a sample of 99 countries. Nanny statism is measured by the number of paternalist laws and regulations adopted by a country in the past. The response to COVID is proxied by the time of adoption of control and containment measures and their stringency. The public health outcome is measured by the COVID-19 death toll at the end of June 2020. These variables, plus several controls, are then used to estimate a set of linear and probit regressions and a proportional hazard model of the timing of adoption of control and containment measures. An increase in nanny statism by 0. 1 (on a scale from 0 to 10) on average increases the probability of adoption of control and containment measures by 0. 077 (i. e. 7. 7 percentage points). The central tenement of the hypothesis is therefore consistent with the empirical evidence. The linear and probit regressions also show that there is no evidence of a significant effect of nanny statism on the stringency of the measures adopted. Irrespective of stringency, however, early adoption of control and containment measures is found to reduce the death toll of COVID-19 in the first half of 2020: an increase in nanny statism by 0. 1 reduces the COVID death toll by approximately 7%. A tradition of nanny statism potentially leads to a more timely and effective public policy response to a new, unknown crisis. Further tests of the hypothesis should look at the relationship between nanny statism and public health outcomes from natural disasters.

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Concepts Keywords
Death COVID-19
June Nanny state
Nanny Paternalism
Statism Public health

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO country
disease VO time
disease MESH death
disease VO effective
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
drug DRUGBANK Ethanol
disease MESH cardiovascular diseases
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease VO population
disease VO vaccine
disease IDO intervention
drug DRUGBANK Isoxaflutole
drug DRUGBANK Tretamine
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH boils
drug DRUGBANK Ademetionine
disease IDO process
drug DRUGBANK Vildagliptin
disease MESH complications
drug DRUGBANK Aspartame
disease VO effectiveness
disease MESH obesity
disease MESH tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH morbidities
drug DRUGBANK Cysteamine
disease MESH causality
disease IDO history
disease MESH zoonotic diseases
drug DRUGBANK Ilex paraguariensis leaf
disease VO Canada

Original Article

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