The stated objective is to manage the spread of the virus so HSE frontline services can cope with demand. Obviously, as you have pointed out, a significantly higher tax to GDP ratio would have opened up more options, particularly at a strategic level. However, that's something that can't be addressed retrospectively.
We know that Sweden has experienced twice as many deaths per 1,000 cases as us and we know that our health service could not have coped with that level given that it has been close to capacity at half that level. Hence, from our starting point - not a hospital bed free in the entire nation - I think we can all agree that Government has managed the situation extremely well. Given the relatively substantial, no questions asked, welfare payments that many of us now claim I think it's safe to conclude that Government has demonstrated that it can and will look after us in difficult times. That's extremely important when we consider the observations from your published study on Scandinavia.
As we extrapolate your findings to include data from Denmark we see a very significantly lower death rate - 76 per million compared with 242 per million in Sweden. We could, of course, draw the obvious conclusion that Denmark's police State style "lockdown" presents a far better model than the Swedish less stringent approach. However, that would be somewhat disrespectful to the intellectual substance of your headline argument and would prematurely dismiss the potential benefits of community immunity.
At this juncture we can, however, conclude with little doubt that we can learn a lot from Scandinavian culture and, in particular, it's taxation culture. Swedes and Danes pay a lot of tax and, most interestingly, they are happy to do that because they know Govt will look after them when they need looking after. Our Govt has, during this pandemic, borrowed money to show us that it can and will look after us. Establishing that trust opens up a range of options including implementation of a radical review of taxation strategy going forward.
You have done your country some service.