LINUS MIMIETZ/UNSPLASH

EVERY COUNTRY has at one point dared to believe they鈥檝e figured out how to beat SARS-CoV-2, until reality sets in.

The UK鈥檚 misguided flirtation with a hands-off 鈥渉erd immunity鈥 strategy in March led quickly to a U-turn and tough restrictions. France and Spain promised they鈥檇 never repeat the draconian lockdowns they imposed early on 鈥 only to break their vow when test-and-trace systems failed to keep pace with summer vacation contagion. Israelis, who after a first lockdown were told to enjoy life and 鈥渉ave a beer,鈥 are now facing a third one. Donald Trump recently claimed he鈥檇 ended the pandemic (he hadn鈥檛).

Now, it鈥檚 Sweden鈥檚 turn. After a summer lull, the Scandinavian country famous for its voluntary 鈥渢rust-based鈥 approach to social distancing is getting battered by a winter wave of the coronavirus. Its seven-day average of daily cases and deaths per capita is currently outpacing the UK, France, and Spain, and isn鈥檛 far off the US鈥檚 tallies. While Sweden鈥檚 total deaths of 7,514 are on a per-capita basis lower than those countries, they far outstrip its Nordic neighbors at five times Denmark鈥檚 rate, nine times Finland鈥檚, and 10 times Norway鈥檚.

The aura of calm that Swedes have projected is fading as a result. With intensive-care beds in Stockholm almost full, Prime Minister Stefan Lofven gave a recent gloomy television address 鈥 a historically rare occurrence 鈥 imploring citizens to follow tough new restrictions to alleviate overstretched hospitals and save Christmas. Public gatherings are capped at eight people; schools have been shut, some for the first time; alcohol sales are banned after 10 p.m. While much is still recommendation rather than rule, Sweden鈥檚 government has proposed a law that would give it the power to close stores in response to a worsening pandemic.

This doesn鈥檛 come close to the widespread business closures seen elsewhere or the bureaucratic form-filling of France鈥檚 lockdowns. But it鈥檚 a sign that whatever was working in Sweden isn鈥檛 doing the trick anymore. Though the country suffered a high death rate during the first wave, there was optimism it was an upfront cost in return for less economic pain and higher immunity levels 鈥 all while respecting, and even reinforcing, a fabric of social trust. Sweden鈥檚 economy at the end of September was only 2.2% smaller than it was in 2019, according to HSBC. But the new wave is a nasty development.

It鈥檚 tempting to gloat over Sweden鈥檚 failures and the attitude of its top epidemiologist, Anders Tegnell, who is by turns curiously inflexible (he opposes face masks) and unpredictable (his U-turns on guidelines for children). But maybe Sweden is simply falling into the norm for this public health crisis. After all, Germany, a bright spot of Europe earlier this year, is going through a similar reversal of fortunes. Its daily deaths are hitting their highest levels since the start of the pandemic, prompting Chancellor Angela Merkel to call on Germans to rein in Christmas celebrations in an emotional speech. Switzerland, too, is being hit harder this time around.

The reality is that all countries have had to learn from mistakes. Data estimating the strictness of COVID-19 restrictions around the world suggest countries like Italy and France have softened their lockdown approach since April, keeping schools open for example. Giuliano di Baldassarre, a professor of crisis management at Uppsala University, reckons the lessons have gone both ways: Sweden has taught other countries to consider more humane and more stable restrictions, but it has also been taught that a lack of legal or regulatory intervention can become a problem.

As countries from the UK to Croatia tighten restrictions ahead of the holidays, the ideal of a European 鈥渕odel鈥 for keeping the virus in check is looking increasingly unattainable 鈥 and that includes the Swedish model, the focus of such fascination earlier this year. It would have been hard to replicate the Scandinavian country鈥檚 natural advantages, such as a high rate of remote work and single-occupant households, elsewhere. Now it seems the country鈥檚 popular commitment to social distancing is suffering from fatigue, as elsewhere. Until vaccines get rolled out at scale, the danger for people everywhere will be imagining they鈥檝e got this virus beaten.

BLOOMBERG OPINION