Commentary: Even China is sticking to a semi-formal lockdown

Commentary: Even China is sticking to a semi-formal lockdown

NEW YORK CITY: If you think one lockdown is painful enough, imagine a second. It is too soon to gau..

NEW YORK CITY: If you think one lockdown is painful enough, imagine a second.

It is too soon to gauge the lasting impact of putting the US economy into a deep freeze for weeks. But it will be very hard for consumers and businesses to shake off a lingering sense of risk aversion.

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The shock of a second wave of sheltering-in-place would be orders of magnitude worse. Twice bitten, multiply shy. Given the choice, no self-preserving leader would take risks with the spectre of another outbreak later this year.

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URGE TO GET ECONOMY ON THE MEND

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Yet the temptation to go for a V-shaped recovery before the November election looks too great for Donald Trump. Publicly discussing prospects of a second outbreak is now banned among US government scientists.

On Wednesday (Apr 24), Mr Trump effectively gagged Robert Redfield, head of the Centers for Disease Control, after he warned of a second — and worse — round of coronavirus infections this coming winter.

What Mr Redfield had meant to say was that every American should get their regular flu injections, the White House explained.

U.S. President Donald Trump reacts to a reporter's question as Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Director Robert Redfield answers questions at the daily coronavirus task force briefing at the White House in Washington on, Apr 22, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst)

Several states, including Florida, South Carolina and Tennessee are already relaxing stay-at-home orders. Tattoo parlours, cinema complexes and bowling alleys are apparently now safe to visit in Georgia.

In reality, such venues are ideal for super-spreaders. In the trade-off between growth and health, reopening the economy too soon achieves neither. Scientists warn such measures will sharply increase the chances of a second wave of coronavirus.

RISKS OF FULLY REOPENING FOR BUSINESS

That, in turn, would trigger another instant depression. Economists point out that the US is not even in a recession, which is defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth.

Yet JPMorgan forecasts that the US economy will shrink by 40 per cent in the second quarter. American unemployment is likely to hit 20 per cent when the April number comes out next week.

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In reality, the US economy is already in depression. Nothing on this scale — and at this speed — has been seen since the Great Depression in the early 1930s.

It took World War II to dig the US out of that. It will take a vaccine, or a miracle prophylactic, to stop Americas first depression in almost a century.

CHINA SHOWS THE WAY

The country to watch is China. Its rules are being set as much by citizens as government. Chinas restaurants are sparse. Few people are flying. And many people only leave home for essential tasks.

The Chinese, in other words, are sticking to a semi-formal lockdown. To judge by US poll numbers, most Americans are in a similar mood.

A crane is seen at a construction site in Beijing, following an outbreak of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in China Apr 17, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins)

Mr Trump may believe he can press a button to switch the US economy back on. In practice, he cannot force consumers to swallow their fears. The more the president talks about the coronavirus — an average of roughly 90 minutes a day — the less Americans trust what he is telling them.

Chinas task is arguably easier than Americas. Its economy is far less dependent on consumer spending than the USs.

In theory, China could have all its manufacturing operations back to capacity by June. In practice, however, their order books are unlikely to be filled.

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As the world moves into its first global contraction since the second world war, that is unlikely to change. Whatever tepid growth ChiRead More – Source

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