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Bird
Flu:

how capitalism could make it worse
Nature can
sometimes do worse things
than capitalism. An earthquake kills 40,000 in a few minutes. A
tsunami wipes out 200,000 in hours. And now the Department of Health
contingency plan for bird flu in Britain is contemplating a ‘not
impossible’ 750,000 deaths if the H5N1 virus goes pandemic. The
government is buying up 14m doses of Tamiflu, a general-purpose
antiviral and probably not very effective prophylaxis against a virus
strain that hasn’t evolved yet, which in any case won’t be
available until April next year and is only enough to treat 25% of
the UK population. Meanwhile the United Nations is facing wildly
varying estimates of the death toll, from 150m from its own advisors
to a paltry 7.4m from the WHO, while newspapers range from tabloid
‘We’re all doomed’ sensationalism to an ‘It’ll be alright
on the night’ conservatism from the better informed but possibly
more complacent qualities.
A pandemic
may well be on the way. The government Chief Medical Officer, Sir Liam
Donaldson,
has announced his estimate of 50,000 ‘excess’ deaths (over and
above the average annual death rate of 12,000 each flu season),
stating: “We can't make this pandemic go away, because it is a
natural phenomenon, it will come.” However, other scientists
dismiss the figure of 50,000 as a complete guess. “It could be
worse, it could be better. I think initially it could be worse than
that”, says Dr Martin Wiselka, consultant in infectious diseases at
Leicester Royal Infirmary.
(BBC
News Online, Oct 16).
The
problem is that everybody is
guessing, and governments are not willing to spend money on hunches.
Currently H5N1 has an exceptionally high mortality rate of 50%, but
is very hard to transmit, especially from one human to another, which
is why only 60 people worldwide have so far died. The current guess
is that the most likely threat is from H5N1 recombining with ordinary
flu during the annual winter flu season. This is known to have
happened during the Spanish flu outbreaks of 1957 and 1968, when the
hybrid strain was much less deadly but spread very rapidly and thus
killed more people. On the basis of this guess, a best-case scenario,
the government plans to rely on its standard seasonal vaccination
programme for at-risk groups including children, old people and
asthmatics, with the additional purchase of the Tamiflu antiviral
drug just in case. However, new research is showing that the 1918
pandemic, the deadliest ever recorded, which killed between 20 and 40
million people, was a pure bird flu, not a hybrid, and that H5N1 is
evolving in ominously similar ways. The 1918 virus infected almost
everyone on the planet within a year of its appearance, and without
the aid of modern transport and cheap mobility. (New Scientist,
October 8). Donaldson dismisses comparison with the 1918 pandemic
because antiviral drugs and other advanced medical practices were not
available then, yet many scientists are worried that the pandemic
could spread so rapidly that it will outrun any attempt to contain
it, and the government in any case has rejected plans to curtail
population movement as largely pointless.
Capitalism
is no more to blame for bird
flu than for the recent earthquake in Kashmir, however it can be
criticized for its way of dealing with natural disasters and threats.
In capitalism, whatever the urgency, nothing can happen until
agreement has been reached over money. As one example, the EU is
currently unable to spend any money on purchasing vaccines and
antiviral drugs because, according to officials, Britain is blocking
agreement on the overall EU budget for 2007 to 2013 (Guardian,
Oct 15). In another less publicized example, scientists have
expressed horror that the team which has recreated the 1918 virus,
‘one of the deadliest viruses of all time’ have been testing it
in live mice at only the second highest level of containment, and
without wearing protective suits. The obvious question, when it is
known that Soviet scientists in the 70’s accidentally released a
mild member of the 1918 family of viruses into the environment, is:
why not the highest level of containment? The answer can only be
cost. If there is a chance to keep cost down, even if it involves a
risk, capitalism will exert pressure to take that chance. It would be
an incredible irony if H5N1 turned out to be a case of mild sniffles
but we all died anyway from an artificially recreated laboratory
virus because somebody tried to save a few quid from their research
budget.
It could
also be argued that
capitalism’s peculiar and illogical ways of working can conspire to
make a deadly pandemic more rather than less likely. The secrecy of
the Chinese state-capitalist regime has already held back study on
H5N1 as, like the SARS epidemic before it, China has refused to allow
researchers access to samples or to reveal actual mortality
statistics. Then there is the incentive for poultry farmers to allow
isolated cases of flu to go unreported rather than see their entire
stocks destroyed, as has happened in South East Asia, where billions
of birds have been culled. The manufacture of an effective antiviral
drug, once the infectious strain has been identified, would be
enormously accelerated if the drug company making it were to provide
the details to other drug companies, but in view of the money to be
made by not doing so, we may not be able to rely on such public
spirited cooperation. And if the worst happens, and governments give
out the useless advice to stay indoors and not travel, how are
workers supposed to make a living? Will bosses look kindly on any
worker who takes a day off sick every time she sneezes or her kids
have a temperature? Will banks look kindly on businesses that curtail
activity because of staff absences? Will capitalism look favourably
on anyone who falters in their perpetual and relentless pursuit of
money because of an altruistic concern for social health and welfare,
or will it instead reward those who have no such concerns?
Capitalist
governments are gambling that H5N1 won’t mutate to humans, or that
if it does mutate to humans, it won’t be deadly, or that if it is
deadly, it won’t spread fast, or that if it spreads fast, it will
be treatable with an antiviral, or that if no antiviral can be
developed in time, that it won’t kill anyone rich or important.
Workers, as so often in wartime, appear in this calculation in the
section at the end, under the heading ‘expendable assets’. We’re
just not worth spending too much money on, provided some of us
survive to keep working.
Diseases
among social animals are common, and since the agricultural
revolution brought humans into close and sustained contact with other
social or herd animals, we have acquired many of
their diseases,(over sixty from dogs for instance). Many of
these now harmless childhood diseases
started life as epidemics that brought empires to their knees and
destroyed civilizations. A new virus strain unleashed on a virgin
population is a more terrible event than any volcano, any earthquake
or any tsunami, and yet capitalism is content to gamble that it won’t
happen, just as it did over the tsunami, or that it won’t be that
serious, just as it’s doing over global warming. Capitalism is
always gambling with our lives in this way, without giving us any say
at all. If the gamble comes off, the rich win. If it doesn’t, we
die.

Nature can
sometimes do worse things
than capitalism. But to fight them and protect ourselves, we need
something better than capitalism.
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