What??
Direct quote from the WHO source:
"The median infection fatality rate across all 51 locations was 0.27% (corrected 0.23%).
Most data came from locations with high death tolls from COVID-19 and 32 of the locations had a
population mortality rate (COVID-19 deaths per million population) higher than the global
average (118 deaths from COVID-19 per million as of 12 September 2020;79 Fig. 3). Uncorrected
estimates of the infection fatality rate of COVID-19 ranged from 0.01% to 0.67% (median 0.10%)
across the 19 locations with a population mortality rate for COVID-19 lower than the global
average, from 0.07% to 0.73% (median 0.20%) across 17 locations with population mortality rate
higher than the global average but lower than 500 COVID-19 deaths per million, and from 0.20%
to 1.63% (median 0.71%) across 15 locations with more than 500 COVID-19 deaths per million.
The corrected estimates of the median infection fatality rate were 0.09%, 0.20% and 0.57%,
respectively, for the three location groups.
For people < 70 years old, the infection fatality rate of COVId-19 across 40 locations with
available data ranged from 0.00% to 0.31% (median 0.05%); the corrected values were similar. "
Listen, this was a very brief abstract and it supported what I said initially. How you can come on here and claim "serious" scientists dont agree boggles the imagination! Clearly you are not one yourself. You couldnt even read the whole abstract and get anything from it.
So, let me add some more quotes from the above source:
"The infection fatality rate is not a fixed physical constant and it can vary substantially across locations, depending on the population structure, the case-mix of infected and deceased individuals and other, local factors. The studies analysed here represent 82 different estimates of the infection fatality rate of COVID-19, but they are not fully representative of all countries and locations around the world. Most of the studies are from locations with overall COVID-19
mortality rates that are higher than the global average. The inferred median infection fatality rate in locations with a COVID-19 mortality rate lower than the global average is low (0.09%). If one could sample equally from all locations globally, the median infection fatality rate might be even
substantially lower than the 0.23% observed in my analysis.
COVID-19 has a very steep age gradient for risk of death. Moreover, many, and in some cases most, deaths in European countries that have had large numbers of cases and deaths and in the USA occurred in nursing homes. Locations with many nursing home deaths may have high estimates of the infection fatality rate, but the infection fatality rate would still be low among non-elderly, non-debilitated people. "