P
olitics
The Spanish Flu Didn’t Wreck the Global Economy What Is Different About the Coronavirus Pandemic? by Walter Scheidel In October 1918, the Spanish flu descended on Stanford University. Residents donned facemasks, football games were cancelled, and students were asked to quarantine on campus. But classes and
assemblies continued to meet. And in addition to fulfilling their regular academic obligations, male students trained to combat German machine guns and poison gas in World War I. Over a tenth of all students fell ill, and a dozen died—roughly in line with the 45,000 cases and 3,000 fatalities re-
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05/06/20