Financial Times Europe - 08.04.2020

(Jacob Rumans) #1

4 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES Wednesday8 April 2020


CO R O N AV I R U S


H


arry Truman, US president from 1945 to
1953, reputedly yearned for a “one-armed
economist” who would give unambiguous
advice rather than the “on the one hand, on
the other” kind. In the coronavirus crisis, his
wish may have come true. Academic economists on both
sides of the Atlantic are virtually unanimous in their sup-
port of lockdown measures taken by governments to stop
the virus from spreading, despite the huge economic costs.
Over the past week, the scale of those costs has become
apparent. In many countries jobs are being lost at a pace
not seen since the 1930s.Ten million Americans aveh
applied for unemployment insurance and1m Britons aveh
registered for universal credit in the previous two weeks.
Purchasing managers’ indices in big European econo-
mies have recorded theirsteepest declines n record. Mosto
analysts expect a bigger and faster contraction in output
across the global economy than during the financial crisis.
Some ask whether the cure might be worse than the dis-
ease. But the reply from economists is a resounding “no”.
“In times of great uncertainty, most economists think
the government should intervene,” said Rachel Griffith,
president of the UK’s Royal Economic Society and profes-
sor of economics at the University of Manchester.
Surveys show a striking degree of consensus among top
economists in favour of the lockdowns.
The IGM Economic Experts Panel’slatest survey f topo
US macroeconomists asked for their view of the statement
“Abandoning severe lockdowns at a time when the likeli-
hood of a resurgence in infections remains high will lead to
greater total economic
damage than sustaining
the lockdowns to elimi-
nate the resurgence risk”.
Eighty per cent of the
panel agreed, the rest
were uncertain or did not
respond. Not a single
expert disagreed.
In Europe, 65 per cent
of respondents agreed that “severe lockdowns — including
closing non-essential businesses and strict limitations on
people’s movement — were likely to be better for the econ-
omy in the medium term than less aggressive measures”.
Only 4 per cent disagreed.
“Clearly there is a cost” to the lockdowns, said Ms Grif-
fith, “but what is the counterfactual? The cost of not con-
taining the virus would be greater — even economically.”
Not only was saving lives inherently valuable, but fear of
contagion would cause economic disruption even in the
absence of government action, she explained.
While there was “exponential infection growth... I am
not surprised that there is a consensus on the need for
lockdown”, said Beatrice Weder di Mauro, president of the
Centre for Economic Policy Research. “The disagreements
will be on how long and how to get out of it.”
For the moment, economists are deferring to medical
and epidemiological experts on when the contagion could
be said to be under control. “We should lift the restrictions
the minute we can,” said Ms Griffith, “once we have testing
and measures for containing the virus... for now it is a
medical not an economic issue.”
In the meantime, many governments are asking econo-
mists to keep a close eye on the costs of the lockdown and
how best to mitigate them without interfering with the
desired epidemiological effects. “There are lots of micro
issues” on which economists could help, said Ms Griffith,
“but broadly the government should do what it is doing.”
A more significant role for economists, she suggested,
lay in thinking about what to do in the longer term. “The
biggest questions are intergenerational issues” such as
“what will happen to those who receive less schooling” as a
result of the lockdowns. There was already a “torrent of
research” taking place, she said. “How do we rebuild the
economy and who do we focus on?” These, she said, were
the sort of questions economists would be exploring,
“starting in six months and going on for the next 20 years”.

[email protected]

GLOBAL INSIGHT


WORLD ECONOMY


Martin


Sandbu


Economists unite in


support of lockdowns


despite the damage


‘The cost of not


containing the
virus would be

greater — even
economically’

DAV I D P I L L I N G— LO N D O N


Tidjane Thiam, former chief executive
of Credit Suisse, is among several promi-
nent Africans pressing for a two-year
moratorium on $115bn of sovereign
African debt owned by the private sec-
tor in what, under normal circum-
stances, would be considered a default.
In a letter seen by the Financial
Times, several senior African figures
said the private sector should join a
planned moratorium on bilateral and
multilateral debt to give African govern-
ments the fiscal space to fight thecoro-
navirus pandemic.
The proposals are expected to be dis-
cussed at the IMF and World Bank
spring meetings, which will be heldnext


week. Mr Thiam told the FT it was right
to ask the private sector to waive cou-
pon payments given theextraordinary
natureof the crisis.
“This is a global exogenous shock.
This is not the result of economic mis-
management,” he said. He added that
the suspension of payments should not
be seen as a default and should not lock
African governments out of hard-won
access to capital markets.
“I would use the word standstill
rather than moratorium since morato-
rium has negative connotations,” Mr
Thiam said.
“If we don’t do this, there is a risk that
official assistance will end up funding
the private sector,” he said, explaining
that governments might otherwise use
bilateral and multilateral debt relief to
pay off private foreign creditors rather
than fighting the health crisis.
Twenty-one African countries have
outstanding foreign currency debt obli-

gations in the form of eurobonds of
roughly $115bn, according to Moody’s,
the rating agency.
China, which has extended billions of
dollars in bilateral loans to African
countries and is owed about a fifth of the
region's total sovereign debts, would
also need to be part of any debt payment
standstill, Mr Thiam said.
As well as Mr Thiam, a French-
Ivorian, backers of the initiative include
Louise Mushikiwabo, secretary-general
of the Organisation International de la
Francophonie; Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala,
former Nigerian finance minister; and
Strive Masiyiwa, executive chairman of
Econet and one of Africa’s most promi-
nent businessmen.
Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s prime minis-
ter, has alsopushedthe G20 to back
widespread debt relief, including
eurobonds.
Ken Ofori-Atta, Ghana’s finance min-
ister, has referred to the need for a

“HIPC on steroids” to help countries
manage the crisis — a reference to the
sweeping African debt relief pro-
gramme launched by the IMF and
World Bank in the late 1990s.
Matt Robinson, an associate manag-
ing director at the rating agency
Moody’s, told the FT that any default,
however it was presented, was likely to
have ratings implications. “Failure to
make a coupon payment at the time in
which it is due would in all likelihood
represent a default,” he said.
Razia Khan, Africa economist at
Standard Bank, said markets welcomed
the idea of bilateral and multilateral
debt relief, but had not priced in any
Africa-wide suspension of eurobond
payments.
“Great care would need to be exer-
cised so that developing countries can
tap international markets in future,”
she said, warning against anything that
looked like a “credit event”.

Eurobonds


Thiam joins calls for halt on Africa debt


Former Credit Suisse chief


among those pressing for


suspension of payments


‘If we don’t
do this,

there is a
risk that

official
assistance

will end up
funding the

private
sector’

C H R I ST I A N S H E P H E R D— B E I J I N G
R O B I N Y U— H O N G KO N G


Days after thecity of Wuhan was put on
lockdown, Song Shan, a recovering
stroke victim in his late 80s, was told he
had to vacate his hospital bed to make
room for coronavirus patients.
“Wuhan’s public transport had all
stopped, there were no cars to carry
him,” his granddaughter Zhou Xiaoxue
said. he pushed her grandfather on aS
trolley through empty streets lick withs
rain in search of a hospital bed.
But the virus had stretchedhealth-
care beyond capacity. Eventually she
took her grandfather home. He died five
days later.
“He worked hard his whole life doing
all he could for the nation, but when he
died there was no place for him,” she
said. The lack of a proper send-off for a
Chinese Communist party member
made her deeply unhappy.
She was finally able to bury her grand-
father two weeks ago after Wuhan cau-
tiously started to liftrestrictions.
Wuhan today lifts its 76-day lock-
down, following a significant drop in
new cases. The number of coronavirus-
related deaths fell to zero on Tuesday.
The loosening of restrictions has been
a relief for many in the city. State news-
paper The Global Times reported
around 55,000 people would today try
to leave the city by train. But it has also
stirred up residual anger over initial
delays andcover-ups hat some feel ledt
to unnecessary infections and deaths.
Last weekend was Qing Ming, China’s
annual tomb-sweeping festival, when
families show filial piety to ancestors by
cleaning headstones, laying flowers and
setting fire to paper money to send the
deceased good fortune in the afterlife.
However, as elsewhere in the world
the outbreak has convulsed rituals for
the dead. The city government last week
banned vigils and group visits to grave-
yards, asking cemeteries to instead pro-
vide free online “tomb sweeping”—


families can visit a digital “grave” to pay
respects and make virtual offerings.
The restrictions coincided with new
doubts over official Chinese tallies of
Covid-19 victims that arose on March 26
after pictures circulated on social media
of crowds forming outside the desig-
natedfuneral home for coronavirus vic-
tims. The relatives were queueing to col-
lect their loved ones’ remains, prompt-
ing some social media users to question
why there were so many people.
On the same day, Caixin, an inde-
pendent Chinese publication, quoted a
truck driver saying he had delivered
5,000 urns to the funeral home that
week, a report that led to expressions on
Chinese social media of further distrust
of the official death toll. Authorities say
2,571 have died as a result of the out-
break in Wuhan as of Monday.
The funeral home, which was
assigned confirmed Covid-19 victims as
well as any death ruled as potentially
from coronavirus, declined to com-
ment. It is unclear how regularly urns

are delivered to the home or what pro-
portion of the Wuhan deaths from coro-
navirus it has handled.
Nurses ave told the FTh they sus-
pect he authorities are under-reportingt
cases. In the early days of the outbreak a
lack of test kits meantsome cases might
have gone undetected. China began to
report a daily count of symptomatic
cases only last week but it has not
revealed a retrospective tally.
In Wuhan, even funeral homesnot
dealing with victims of Covid-19 have
been feeling the strain of the lockdown.
Now that it has eased, relatives are being
asked to pick up the remains of their
loved ones s soon as possiblea. Liu Yao-
cheng, a 36-year-old Wuhan resident,
said the municipal disease control
authorities had contacted her. “Due to
the large volume of urns they had to
look after, they could no longer keep my
aunt’s until the end of April,” she said.
Ms Liu added authorities appeared
to be struggling.“Amid all this chaos,
how can I be sure that what I’m going

to pick up are really my aunt’s ashes?”
Salia Yang, who lost both her mother
and grandfather to the virus, has been
unable to collect their belongings romf
hospital. The items were deemed to be
“virus-contaminated” and would be dis-
carded, medical staff told her, despite
Ms Yang telling themshe needed the
belongingsto make insurance claims.
“It’s bad enough that people have lost
their loved ones. Why do they have to
make it so hard to take care of the affairs
afterwards?” Ms Yang said.
Despite her grandfather’s death, Ms
Zhou is optimistic about the city’s abil-
ity to move on. She has been impressed
with how local community officials
organised and paid for the funeral.
“I felt resentful, but later it has gradu-
ally changed to understanding and sor-
row,” she said. “The spiritual scars will
vary from person to person, but the gen-
eration who lived through this catastro-
phe will never forget.”
Additional reporting by Qianer Liu in
Shenzhen and Emma Zhou in Beijing

China. estrictions easedR


Wuhan urns bear witness to city’s tragedy


Crowds at funeral home to


collect remains stir doubts


over official tallies of victims


Grim task: a
man wearing
full protective
clothing carries
a box containing
someone’s ashes
from a funeral
home in Wuhan
last week
RomanPilipey/EPA

A N D R E W JAC K —LO N D O N


Closing schools does little to slow the
spread of coronavirus and imposes
economic costs that could outweigh the
benefits, according to a study that
raises questions over the widespread
application of the policy worldwide.


“The evidence to support national clo-
sure of schools to combat Covid-19 is
very weak,” said the research led by
Russell Viner, a professor at Great
Ormond Street Institute of Child Health,
part of University College London.


“The economic costs and potential
harms of school closure are undoubt-
edly very high,” concluded the study
published yesterday in the journal Lan-
cet Child and Adolescent Health.
Governments have ordered the clo-
sure of schools as the pandemic has
spread, with the aim of limiting infec-
tion and easing the pressure on health
services struggling to respond to a surg-
ing number of serious cases.
Unesco, the Paris-based international
organisation, estimates that 91 per cent
of the world’s learners —nearly 1.6bn

people, mostly of school age — have
been affected by nationwide closures of
schools in 188 countries.
The policy has caused difficulties for
many parents who have been confined
for long periods, many juggling working
from home with childcare and home
schooling.
Forced absenteeism of parents from
work as they look after children would,
in the UK, cost up to 1 per cent of gross
domestic product for a 12-week closure,
and 3 per cent of GDP for an eight-week
closure in the US, the study found. Inter-

national organisations have also warned
about the broader and longer-term risks
to children of closures, including con-
cerns over child safety and welfare. In
many countries, school offers a sanctu-
ary from abusive households, provides
essential feeding programmes and
reduces the risk of sexual violence.
Robert Jenkins, Unicef’s global chief
for education, said: “This goes beyond
learning to many other services pro-
vided in schools.”
There are worries closures could, in
lower-income countries, hasten the rate
at which children drop out of school.
The UCLanalysis of academic stud-
ies s based on scrutiny of a limitedi
number of published academic studies
and non-peer-reviewed ones examining
the effects of school closures during the
outbreak and previous coronavirus epi-
demics. It examined studies of closures
notably in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong
and Singapore.
The authors stressed that most chil-
dren infected with Covid-19 had no — or
mild — symptoms and cautioned:
“Policymakers need to be aware of the
equivocal evidence when considering
school closures.”

Education


Cost of school closures likely to outweigh benefits, study finds


ST E P H A N I E F I N D L AY— N E W D E L H I

The chief of one of India’s largest pri-
vate hospital chains has warned that
the country faces a critical shortage of
ventilators and intensive care unit staff
if coronavirus infections rise rapidly.

India isrushing to contain the coronavi-
rus outbreak fter confirmed cases leapta
250 per cent in less than a week to
almost 5,000. Experts fear that authori-
ties are underestimating the scale of the
crisis and that the actual number of
infections is far higher. India, they point
out, has one of the lowesttesting rates ni
the world.
Narendra Modi’s government has
placed India in a 21-day lockdown until
April 14 in the hope of preventing the
virus from overwhelming its fragile
healthcare system.
But Ashutosh Raghuvanshi, manag-
ing director and chief executive of Fortis
Healthcare, said the healthcare system
was ill prepared for a surge in infections.
“Definitely there will be a shortage of
ventilators in case the outbreak goes to a

level it has gone in some other coun-
tries,” he said.
Mr Raghuvanshi added that there was
also a scarcity of staff required to oper-
ate the equipment. “Not many people
are used to taking care of critical
patients who are on ventilators and who
require this complex care.”
The government has blamed the
rapid rise of infections on a series of
superspreader events, including a gath-
ering of Muslim missionaries inNew
Delhi. Health officials are worriedCov-
id-19 is spreading unchecked through
densely packed urban slums where
social distancing has been difficult to
enforce.
India, which only spends about 1 per
cent of its gross domestic product on
healthcare, has allocated fewer than
20,000 ventilators for the treatment of
Covid-19 patients.
According to a Johns Hopkins report,
the US, which is tryingdesperatelyto
procure more of the life-saving devices
for its significantly smaller population,
has about 160,000 ventilators.

Healthcare


India hospital chief warns of


equipment and skills shortage


Contracts & Tenders


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