Financial Times Europe - 26.03.2020

(Axel Boer) #1

2 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES Thursday 26 March 2020


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Cases so far:

Tokyo residents asked to stay indoors
over the weekend after infections rise

Tokyo’s governor has asked the population of the
world’s largest city to stay at home this weekend after
yesterday’s record daily rise — 41 — in new coronavirus
infections. Tuesday’s figure was just 17.
The announcement by Yuriko Koike, which came
less than 24 hours after Tokyo announced the post-
ponement of the summer Olympics, raised fears that
Japan could be on course for an “explosive spike” after a
comparatively slow rate of increase in recent weeks.

US, Spain and Italy account for more
than half of all new daily cases

Heir to British throne tests positive but
has mild case and is working at home

Prince Charles, 71, has tested positive for Covid-19,
Clarence House, his official residence, said
yesterday.
The British heir to the throne had mild symptoms but
was otherwise in good health and working from home.
The Duchess of Cornwall, the prince’s wife, had been
found to be free of the virus after tests in Scotland,
where the couple have been staying, it added.

Daily new confirmed cases
















Mar  Mar  Mar  Mar 
Sources: Johns Hopkins University, CSSE; FT research; Worldometers

US


Spain

Italy

Rest of
world

Positive cases in the US, Spain and Italy underscore their
position as the global virus hotspots. US cases total
55,081. Spain now has a higher death toll than China.

4 51,
cases and 20,499 deaths by 17.12 on March 25 2020
Source: Johns Hopkins University, CSSE
Read more at ft.com/coronavirus

CORONAVIRUS


ROUND-UP


US urges Saudi Arabia to help stabilise
oil markets ahead of G20 meeting

America’s top diplomat has appealed to Saudi Arabia to
help stabilise energy markets ahead of a meeting of G
leaders as the pandemic upturns the world economy.
US secretary of state Mike Pompeo spoke to Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman about the need “to
maintain stability in global energy markets amid the
worldwide response” to the coronavirus, according to a
US state department statement. It comes after Saudi
Arabia raised oil production, triggering a price war.

Canada unlocks C$82bn in financial aid
after Trudeau drops controversial plan

Canada’s House of Commons passed emergency legisla-
tion to unlock C$82bn in financial assistance for indi-
viduals and businesses after Justin Trudeau’s govern-
ment dropped some controversial measures.
Mr Trudeau’s proposal would have given his govern-
ment unlimited scope to tax, spend and borrow until
the end of 2021. The government agreed to drop the
taxation power and shorten the term of other emer-
gency powers to September, Canadian media reported.

R I C H A R D M I L N E— OSLO

Sweden has become an international
outlier in its response to coronavirus,
keeping schools open and adopting few
other restrictions as the Scandinavian
nation embarks on what one health
expert called a “huge experiment”.

Since the UK went into lockdown on
Monday evening, Sweden is the largest
European country with the fewest limits
on citizens’ movements. Schools for
children up to the age of 16 remain open,
many people continue to go to work and
packed commuter trains and buses
were reported in the capital, Stockholm.
“Clearly, Sweden stands out at the
moment,” said Carl Bildt, the former
prime minister.
Swedish authorities have banned
public gatherings of more than 500
people, closed universities and advised
workers to stay at home if possible.
Authorities on Tuesday ordered restau-
rants and bars only to serve people at
tables rather than at the bar.
Local media have been full of stories
of thousands of people gathering at
Swedish ski resorts, which until Satur-
day kept their nightlife open. The virus

has previously spread easily in moun-
tain resorts in Austria and Italy.
Johan Carlson, head of Sweden’s pub-
lic health agency, last week defended
Sweden’s approach, saying the country
“cannot take draconian measures that
have a limited impact on the epidemic
but knock out the functions of society”.
But he conceded that the 90,000 fig-
ure for the number of people who die
annually in Sweden would “increase sig-
nificantly” if its healthcare system
became overburdened. There have
been just over 2,500 reported Covid-
cases in Sweden and 44 deaths.
“The future still looks manageable,”

said Anders Tegnell, Sweden’s state epi-
demiologist. He argued that schools
needed to stay open to provide childcare
for health workers, noting young people
appeared to have lower infection rates.
But a significant number of Swedish
health experts disagree. Mr Tegnell has
faced criticism after details of the antivi-
rus tactics leaked at the week-
end. Joacim Rocklov, an epidemiologist
at Umea University, said the authorities
were taking huge risks with public
health when so much is unknown.
“I do not see why Sweden would be so
different from other countries. It is a
huge experiment,” he said. “We have no
idea. It could work out. But it could also
go crazily in the wrong direction.”
Swedish authorities have said they are
not explicitly pursuing a strategy of
“herd immunity”, where a large seg-
ment of the population contracts the
virus in order for society to build up
immunity. The UK’s chief scientific
adviser suggested last week that Britain
had adopted such an approach before
the government backtracked.
Sweden is instead seeking to slow the
spread of infections and ensure its
health system does not become over-
whelmed. Mr Bildt said the situation in

Stockholm had changed “dramatically”
in recent weeks despite the absence of
legal restrictions, with many fewer peo-
ple going outside. But Mr Rocklov said it
was not yet known how long immunity
to Covid-19 would last. “There is a big
risk that Sweden would have to go into
quarantine when the health system goes
into crisis,” he added.
Stefan Lofven, Sweden’s prime minis-
ter, has called on everyone to play a part
in stopping the virus from spreading. He
used a televised address on Sunday to
warn of more restrictive measures.
Some argue the damage could cause
to the economy is too high. Kerstin
Hessius, a prominent fund manager,
argues Sweden’s strategy may be swap-
ping one disaster for a worse one. Her
views provoked a riposte from Leif Ost-
ling, former chief executive of truck-
maker Scania, who accused her of living
in a “financial bubble”. He urged Swedes
to hold to their “humanist viewpoint”.
Mr Rocklov said authorities were not
giving enough information for people to
make up their own mind. “More and
more experts are feeling uneasy with
this stewardship. It is not allowing for an
open debate. It is rather trying to push
down and make people quiet.”

Public health

Sweden bucks global trend with low number of restrictions

Stockholm: one expert has called the
national strategy a ‘huge experiment’

DANIEL DOMBEY— MADRID
GUY CHAZAN— BERLIN
JIM BRUNSDEN— BRUSSELS
France, Italy and Spain and six other
euro area governments have called for
the issuance of joint European debt, or
so-called coronabonds, to finance the
fight against Covid-19, setting up a clash
with capitals including Berlin that
believe it is premature.
In a joint letter to European Council
president Charles Michel, leaders from
the nine countries said the EU needed

“to work on a common debt instrument
issued by a European institution to raise
funds on the market on the same basis
and to the benefits of all member
states”. They argue the move would
ensure “stable long-term financing for
the policies required to counter the
damages caused by this pandemic”.
The intervention came a day before a
planned video conference of EU leaders
on the next stages of Europe’s crisis
response. Eurozone finance ministers
were on Tuesday unable to agree a firm
plan for the bloc’s bailout fund, the
European Stability Mechanism, to issue
credit lines to help tackle the crisis.
Germany has raised concerns the bloc
could exhaust possibilities for central-

ised fiscal action too early, before the
extent of economic needs becomes
clear. The Dutch government stressed
the ESM should be a last resort, and
firmly ruled out coronabonds.
The idea of joint coronabonds resur-
rects the concept of “eurobonds” —
rejected by the Netherlands, Germany
and other northern members of the cur-
rency bloc as fundamentally incompati-
ble with their vision of monetary union.
Peter Altmaier, the German economy
minister, told Handelsblatt: “I urge cau-
tion when supposedly new, ingenious
concepts are presented which often
enough are just long discarded ideas
coming back from the dead.”
Berlin said it had “already agreed a

comprehensive package of measures
and there is an ambitious, targeted pro-
gramme on the European level”. But
France, Italy, Spain and others argued
Covid-19 constituted an external, sym-
metric shock that affects all countries.
European Central Bank president
Christine Lagarde urged finance minis-
ters during Tuesday's video conference
to embrace the use of coronabonds, said
people familiar with the discussion.
The signatories of the letter include
the leaders of Portugal, Ireland, Greece,
Slovenia, Luxembourg and Belgium.
“This common debt instrument should
have sufficient size and long maturity to
be fully efficient and avoid rollover risks
now as in the future,” the letter stated.

European Council letter

Nine EU nations call for joint debt deal

‘Coronabonds’ will ensure

stable finances to counter
pandemic, say backers

V I C TO R M A L L E T— PARIS
DA N I E L D O M B E Y— MADRID
MI L E S J O H N S O N— ROME
Franck Dattée is discovering how hard it
is to keep his business going in the midst
of a pandemic, however often French
employers and workers are urged to
keep the economy moving.
“At the moment almost all our cus-
tomers have decided to close their
building sites,” said Mr Dattée, who nor-
mally has 50 electricians for construc-
tion and security systems.
Unlike Giuseppe Conte, the Italian
prime minister, who decided to close all
non-essential businesses to slow the
spread of coronavirus, the French gov-
ernment has called on companies
repeatedly to stay open and on workers
to show up for jobs even if they are not in
essential services such as food supply.
“We have to continue to produce and
to keep the country running,” President
Emmanuel Macron said last week, two
days into a nationwide lockdown that
has stopped people leaving home except
to work, buy food or take exercise.
As coronavirus moves from Asia to
Europe and the US, governments are
facing the toughest of choices. If they
bring industry and construction to a
halt along with the entertainment and
travel sectors already shut down, the
resulting recession could be lasting. If
they do not, workers could fall ill and
spread the virus, prolonging the health
crisis and the downturn. On Tuesday
Donald Trump insisted the coronavirus
would kill fewer people than a “massive
recession or depression”.
Gilles Moëc, chief economist at Axa,
the French insurer, said: “The calcula-
tion of time versus depth for the drop in
GDP is not easy. Down the road, if some
more non-essential sectors close but
you end up with a shorter period of
disruption, you may not lose that much
over the year.”
European countries wondering about
the economic impact of pandemic
measures may look with some alarm at
China. Last week the Chinese National
Bureau of Statistics released a series
of poor economic indicators for Janu-
ary-February — the virus broke out in

only undermine the businesses involved
but also the whole economic supply
chain”. They will ensure measures are in
place to protect workers, some of whom
have exercised their right to absent
themselves in case of danger.
In the UK, housebuilders complain
the government’s advice on whether
sites should remain open has been mud-
dled. In the absence of a clarity, Taylor
Wimpey, one of Britain’s largest build-
ers, said it was shutting all its sites.
In Spain, where building work and
sales of everything from mattresses to
sports gear continue, the stand-off over
the lockdown has pitted the central gov-
ernment against some regions. Quim
Torra, leader of the Catalan administra-
tion, called for a “comprehensive stay-
at-home order”, saying “workers pro-
viding key services should be the only
exception”. Murcia ordered the “total
closure of the region except for minimal
services”, but the central government
said the decree had no legal force.
Nadia Calviño, deputy prime minister
for the economy, stressed the need to
“safeguard [labour] activity and

Closure debate.Competing pressures


Economies torn between health or wealth


Tough choices are being made


about protecting society or


getting ready for recovery


Hubei province in mid-January. These
included a 13.5 per cent year-on-year
fall in industrial output and a 20.5 per
cent drop in retail sales. In February,
President Xi Jinping said “large-scale
lay-offs” should be avoided. State-con-
trolled banks were told to continue to
extend credit to struggling businesses.
Across Europe, difficult negotiations
are under way between governments,
employers, unions and hard-pressed
doctors pressing for the tightest of lock-
downs to ease pressure on hospitals.
In Sweden, business people and sci-
entists argue over whether the meas-
ures against the virus are worth the eco-
nomic damage they cause. The French
government reached an uneasy truce
over the weekend with employer groups
in the construction sector, which
accounts for 1.5m jobs and nearly 6 per
cent of gross domestic product, after
Muriel Pénicaud, the labour minister,
accused them of “defeatism” in telling
companies to close.
The two sides agreed to continue
operations to “avoid a complete stop-
page of building sites, which would not

Slim pickings:
a strawberry
farm in Sainte-
Livrade-sur-Lot,
south-western
France. Many
farmers say the
lockdown has
left them short
of labour
Nicolas Tucat/AFP/Getty

employment so that there is an ade-
quate base to return to growth when we
leave this health crisis behind”.
Italy’s economic shutdown is not
absolute. Mr Conte said “we will slow
down the country’s productive engine,
but we will not stop it”. Rome ruled that
any business or factory not “strictly nec-
essary, crucial or indispensable” must
shut until April 3. Unions said the meas-
ures were not enough to protect work-
ers, and the Italian General Confedera-
tion of Labour threatened a general
strike in defence of health. But Confind-
ustria, the business lobby, asked Mr
Conte to ensure supply chains and sup-
port services that allow companies to
keep working were maintained.
Disputes about economic imperatives
matter little to smaller employers such
as Mr Dattée. He has no masks or sani-
tiser for his workers, and the online sites
handling benefits for laid-off staff have
been congested. “Right now we are in a
state of total uncertainty,” he added.
Additional reporting by Domitille Alain in
Paris, Richard Milne in Oslo and Tom
Mitchell in Singapore

‘I urge
caution

when new
concepts

are just long
discarded

ideas
coming

back from
the dead’

CORONAVIRUS


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