Will there be another pandemic by the year 2030?
➕
Plus
87
Ṁ6590
2030
50%
chance

Resolves YES if the WHO declares a pandemic not related to Covid-19 on or by December 31, 2030. Resolves NO otherwise.

If the WHO declares a pandemic due to some variant of Covid-19, this will not count.

Get
Ṁ1,000
and
S1.00
Sort by:

The WHO doesn't declare pandemics, they declare Public Health Emergencies of International concern (I'd have lost money on the bet).

@JoeC how are you planning on resolving this?

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandemic

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_health_emergency_of_international_concern

@RobertCousineau Great question, sorry I didn't see it before. The director general of the WHO claimed on March 11, 2020, that "We have therefore made the assessment that COVID-19 can be characterized as a pandemic. " The director-general seemed to be speaking on behalf of the WHO during this time. If there's another such statement is made by the director general or someone else who uncontroversially represents the WHO, I'll consider the WHO to have declared a pandemic for the sake of this question's resolution.

There are 6.75 years left for this to happen. The 6.75th root of 0.74 (the chance of no pandemic, according to this market at time of writing) is ~0.956, meaning this market currently estimates the base rate of a new pandemic at 4.4%. This seems high to me, since afaict there have only been 2 new pandemics in the last 100 years (HIV and covid). Even taking into account a theoretical modest increase in risk due to agricultural practices in China, I think this could stand to go down a few points.

predicts NO

@AngolaMaldives Just realised the description says 'by 2030' includes 2030, making the implied base rate 3.9%. Underlying reasoning is the same, though it does mean I bet more agressively than intended.

@AngolaMaldives re base rates, I think WHO also declared 2009 swine flu a pandemic. And they here describe 1957 & 1968 influenza as pandemics (though idk if they were making declarations in those days). I think the appropriate base rate is more like 4-5%.

Cavendish Labs prevents this