“…We note that while the average medical duration from the onset of symptoms to death for COVID-19 is longer than two weeks (around 18 days, see Verity et al, 2020), the duration from reported cases to deaths is likely to substantially shorter because of reporting delays. For example, Hortaçsu, Liu and Schwieg (2020) assume that new cases of COVID-19 are reported with a lag of 8 days in their baseline calculations (5 days for symptoms to appear, consistent with the evidence from Lauer et al (2020) and Park et al (2020), as people are unlikely to be tested without exhibiting symptoms, and an additional 3 days to capture delays in obtaining test results, based on andecdotal reports from the US). Since deaths are likely reported in a timely manner, if new cases are reported with a lag of 8 days, we would expect an average duration of around 10 days (≈1.43 weeks) between reported cases and reported deaths. As a second validation check, we ask whether our estimates of ℛ t are correlated with past movement data, as it should be if the estimates are meaningful.…”