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Wednesday, August 19, 2020

“Humankind cannot bear very much reality.”

It’s Simple. Contain the Virus. The Economy Will Come Back.

We need to get real about reality.
“Humankind cannot bear very much reality.”

So said the poet T.S. Eliot. It’s an apt explanation for the White House’s failure to respond adequately to the pandemic that has swept across America and the rest of the world.

Even as reality continues to intrude, President Trump has either largely dismissed or ignored his science and medical advisers. And the result is that the economy, the one thing he seems to care most about, and which he hoped would escort him to a second term, has been devastated.

As both history and data from today demonstrate, health and the economy are not antagonistic; they are dance partners, with public health taking the lead. The safer people feel, the more they will engage in economic activity.

A recent study of the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic by a member of the Federal Reserve board and economists at the Fed and M.I.T. compared cities that imposed stringent public health measures — including school and church closings, public gathering bans, quarantines and restricted business hours — with cities that opened faster and imposed fewer restrictions. The more stringent cities not only had fewer deaths but experienced “a relative increase in economic activity from 1919 onward.”

Containing the virus has allowed many European economies to recover far better than the U.S. Look at Germany, which has an unemployment rate of 6.4 percent. The rate in the U.S. is 10.2 percent. In March and April, according to OpenTable, the reservation booking company, business in restaurants in Germany and the U.S. were in the identical place, down over 90 percent year over year. Since then they have diverged widely: data for Aug. 16 (the latest data at this writing) shows German restaurants enjoyed 9 percent more business than last year, before the pandemic, while U.S. restaurants were down around 50 percent.

And in a report last week, the National League of Cities said that precipitous declines in tax revenues were forcing cities to “severely cut services at a time when communities need them most, to lay off and furlough employees who make up a large share of America’s middle class, and to pull back on capital projects, further affecting local employment, business contracts and overall investment in the economy.”

In June the World Bank estimated that global G.D.P. this year would decline by at least 5.2 percent and possibly much more. The Congressional Budget Office expects G.D.P in the U.S. to fare worse, down 5.9 percent for the year, even after factoring in projected third quarter growth of more than 20 percent. But that projection assumes the containment of the virus, a huge assumption.

Indeed, a Morgan Stanley model predicts that under current policies the U.S. is currently on track to have 150,000 new cases a day later this year. And that number is not even a worst case. If we do suffer case counts anything like those, dramatic growth in the economy simply won’t happen.

Bad as the virus has been this summer, it actually spreads better in low temperatures, and when temperatures fall, more people will be inside in poorly ventilated areas where transmission is also more likely. If the U.S. goes into the fall with new daily cases in the tens of thousands, as they are now, then the numbers could explode and the Morgan Stanley prediction could come true. Considering our containment efforts to date, there is little reason for optimism.
If that occurs, the economy will not come back. Jerome Powell, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, said as much recently. “The path forward for the economy is extraordinarily uncertain and will depend in large part on our success in keeping the virus in check,” he said at a July 29 news conference. He added: “A full recovery is unlikely until people are confident that it is safe to re-engage in a broad range of activities.”

But containment, and the confidence that goes with it, is not remotely where we are at the moment. Among developed nations, the U.S. ranks first in categories one would prefer to be last in: number of cases and number of deaths. It lags well behind in economic recovery as well. As of this writing, the European Union and Britain combined have a population of about 510 million, and 1,924,569 Covid-19 cases. They have had around 8,000 cases for the latest daily count. The United States, population 328 million, just passed 5.4 million cases, with 42,303 the latest daily case count.
Bringing the economy back requires precisely the same three measures that controlling the virus does: First, better compliance with social distancing, wearing masks, personal hygiene and avoiding crowds; second, finally — finally — getting the supply chain and personnel infrastructure in place to support the necessary testing and contact tracing; and, third, the bitter medicine of regional shutdowns.

The same Morgan Stanley model that predicts that the U.S. is on track to reach 150,000 cases a day also has a “bullish” scenario in which the U.S. case counts decline to European levels. But for that to happen, the modelers assumed “more strict restrictions and broader interventions” such as lockdowns “similar” to those imposed by China and major European Union countries.

Without active, aggressive White House leadership we cannot achieve that and — reality again — there isn’t the slightest hint that will happen. But in 1918 leadership came from cities and states. If governors and mayors act aggressively, especially if they act jointly, we can still make significant progress.

In April, I predicted that summer would not bring relief from the virus, and that we would experience not a second wave but continuous swells, depending on how well we complied with public health measures. Unfortunately too many states eased up too early or did little or nothing to control the virus. On the day that prediction was published, April 30, the seven-day average of new cases was 28,943. On Aug. 16, the seven-day average was 51,523.

I also warned of not simply swells but a viral hurricane-like storm surge if the country does not act aggressively and the public fails to comply. I stand by that prediction. Tens of thousands more will die on top of the more than 170,000 already lost in the U.S., and millions will suffer economic devastation.

And, in reality, all of it will be unnecessary. God help us.

John M. Barry is a professor at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine and the author of “The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History.”

7 comments:

Oorah Kevoidee said...

https://www.timesjournalonline.com/article.asp?id=105151

A fire started in the kitchen destroyed the bunkhouse at The Zone in Gilboa, 2 days after owners were notified they face $60,000+ in fines for violating COVID regulations.

The fire remains under investigation by New York State Fire Prevention & Control.

While COVID concerns - Oorah's charged with illegally operating a childrens camp - are new, safety concerns at the former Golden Acres Farm & Ranch Resort are not.

Code Officer Brian Caron updated Town Supervisor Alicia Terry & councilmen on issues inspecting the campus & getting needed repairs done.

And 2 years ago, 6 fire depts were called to a full structure fire at Boys Zone Jefferson at the former Deer Run.

Thick, black smoke from Wednesday’s fire could be seen miles away & it took 17 fire depts from 3 counties from 1:30 pm till midnight to extinguish it.

Schoharie County Health Director Amy Gildemeister's office found significant electrical issues at the bunkhouse the day before the fire & an overflowing toilet may have contributed to the blaze.

“We’ve been trying to shut them down for weeks,” for COVID violations, she said.

According to Dr. Gildemeister, $60,000 in fines came after Oorah ignored a cease & desist on July 29 after the Health Dept determined it's running a childrens camp - illegal under COVID & not what Oorah claimed in its safety plan & permit.

Girls Zone had been allowed as a hotel after State DOH gave its okay, Gildemeister said; by definition, that means children under 15 must be with their parent.

But when staff visited the camp after complaints from neighbors - immediately after it opened - that crowds both there and out & about weren’t following COVID restrictions, Dr. Gildemeister found 30+ underage children on their own.

Campers were using facilities like bumper boats - specifically not allowed under the permit - and Instagram showed a large group of singers, unmasked & no social distancing with arms around each other.

“It’s a children’s camp,” Gildemeister said.

On July 29, her office issued a cease & desist shutting down the camp but because of Sabbath, Oorah was given until August 2 to leave.

They didn’t leave - and filed their own stay order which was denied by a judge. On August 6, officials put up 80 notices of closure at the camp, but “Still they did not vacate,” Dr. Gildemeister said. “We heard many reports of activities over the weekend.”

By the day before the fire, it did appear many campers left & others were getting ready to leave, she said.

Fines are $2,000 a day Oorah remains open & owners could also face jail time.

If campers test positive back home, her dept won’t necessarily be notified, she said.

“There are a lot of wild cards.”

Among them: whether campers, most from New York City / New Jersey, would even share they’d been upstate.

Dr. Gildemeister said her office received several reports of girls with fevers allowed to return to camp or sent home; Oorah 'said' there have been no positive cases.

Allied with Agudah Fressers said...

https://coloradosun.com/2020/08/04/cease-and-desist-letters-for-coronavirus/

Other cease-and-desist letters from the attorney general include a July 2 document sent to Andrew Wommack Ministries in Woodland Park. The Christian ministry hosted a multi-day summer family Bible conference on its Teller County campus that was attended by several hundred people.

And now the Bible camp is tied to a COVID-19 outbreak. Among staff at the camp, 22 have confirmed cases of the virus and three have suspected cases. In addition, 16 people who attended the camp now have the virus, according to the latest outbreak list from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

Guests were only encouraged to wear masks and socially distance themselves, via signs posted at entrances.

Ferd said...

Why didn't Cuomo order this for Romimu & Silver Lake?

https://www.11alive.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/new-york-state-troopers-pull-plug-on-jamboree-in-the-woods/71-ba7ed69a-9228-4ef7-90c4-f2aaf0c8f5c7

SPRINGVILLE, N.Y. — New York State Troopers are blocking the entrance to the Hogarosa Campground in Springville.

The move came after the state pulled the plug on the three-day Jamboree in the Woods music festival.

According to Buffalo Business First, organizers intended to defy a cease-and-desist order from the state Department of Health, and a temporary restraining order from the State Supreme Court, by holding a camping event without music.

Public health officials argue that an event with several hundred people is a big risk for transmission of the coronavirus, even with masks and proper social distancing.

UOJ Gets Results said...

Lake George is a significant Fresser hangout in the summer. There are minyanim and the local Price Chopper stocks cholov Yisroel, pas Yisroel & heimishe shechita fresserei.

https://poststar.com/news/local/warren-county-cracking-down-on-businesses-that-violate-covid-19-rules/article_11134483-7df5-5c21-bc4c-94e9c5216742.html

Warren County announced it is suspending the certificate of occupancy for the Funa’rama Fun Park in Lake George, which reopened despite being told repeatedly by county and village officials that it was to remain closed under state regulations.

County officials did not name the business in its news release, but they were identified through a Freedom of Information Law request from The Post-Star seeking correspondence regarding COVID-19 compliance enforcement actions in Lake George.

The Funa’rama Fun Park was shut down and issued a citation last weekend for operating without clearance from the state.

Warren County Administrator Ryan Moore sent an email to Funa’rama owner Tom Zeppieri in response to his inquiry about whether he could open because he has separate licenses for his arcade and fun park.

Moore wrote: “You know and have known for some time that arcades and fun parks are not currently allowed to be open under state orders. Your willful actions to violate those orders are disrespectful to your community and to your peers who have remained closed.”

Shmarya Groupie said...

https://www.ibtimes.com/goodyears-zero-tolerance-policy-blue-lives-matter-all-lives-matter-results-boycott-3031027

Yeah!

Stuck in the Muck said...

https://www.wwnytv.com/2020/07/03/state-issues-cease-desist-order-muck-park/

I thought this was an Agudah event, but never mind as there is no mention of food.

Frankels Shul Felon said...

https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/ten-arrested-defrauding-victims-out-more-9-million-diamonds

10 arrests for using trickery to steal diamonds from 47th St chevra?

Then why isn't Flatbush-Monsey molester Potyi Lipschutz among those arrested?