The lockdown has failed. There is no other way of saying it. No amount of statistical jugglery, clever by half graphics and downright sophistry, if not whataboutery, can conceal this fact any longer.
THE MEDICAL FAILURE:
What was the foremost objective of this most repressive lockdown? It was to break the chain of infection as the Prime Minister propounded on the night of March 23 in his second address to the nation. Has the said objective been achieved? The answer is no. On the evening of May 14, India "officially" overtook China in the number of infections. At the time of writing, India had reported 85,476 cases as compared to 84,031 in China. Remember China’s pandemic started more than two months before India reported its first case.
China’s reported its first case on November 17, 2019, while India’s first case emerged on January 30, 2020, and that too was a student who returned from Wuhan. India’s numbers are also to be evaluated in the context of the ridiculously low level of testing that we have carried out so far -- 20 lakh tests in 106 days for a population of 135 crores and counting. Today, India’s doubling rate stands at 13 days, the highest among the top 15 countries with the maximum number of cases. Doubling time is the estimated number of days it takes for the number of infections to double in a country.
A rather obtuse attempt was made by the government on April 11 to justify the lockdown by quoting an unnamed study. The Centre said that if there were no lockdown, India would have gone from 341 cases on March 22 -– the day country observed the Janta curfew -- to 8.2 lakh cases by April 15, a day after the first lockdown ended.
The claim is preposterous and it can be borne out from the fact that it took India 52 days to get from 1 to 341 cases. Now, the government was claiming that in 21 days -- sans a lockdown -- India would have gone from 341 to 8.2 lakh cases.
This anonymous study touted by Health Ministry spokesperson in an official briefing obviously seems to be a "command performance" by some "geniuses" in the government. It was roundly debunked by the Former World bank economist Salman Soz who wrote: “What of the assertions promoted by the Modi government (initially by the BJP) that without the lockdown and containment measures, India would have recorded 8.2 lakh cases by 15 April? This is where we should truly worry about the competence of our government. To get to 8.2 lakh cases on 15 April from 24 March (492 cases), the average daily growth rate had to be 40 per cent. No nation in my sample of 51 countries recorded that type of growth. Russia was the highest at 19 per cent. Of course, Russia had imposed restrictions but Sweden had not and its case growth was much lower at 7 per cent for the same period”. Mark the world average daily growth rate of 40%. No country in the world has fortunately reported it till now. Remember there is another set of NITI Aayog "geniuses", who put out a similar curveology that predicted that India would be at zero new cases by today - May 16.
ECONOMIC FAILURE: