The Wall Street Journal - 21.03.2020 - 22.03.2020

(Joyce) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Saturday/Sunday, March 21 - 22, 2020 |C1


REVIEW


Clean Hands
The medical pioneer who
proved that handwashing
saves livesC3

Let the Outside In
The ‘glass house’
of Mies van der Rohe
Books C7

CULTURE|SCIENCE|POLITICS|HUMOR

ILLUSTRATION BY JOHN W. TOMAC; BETTMANN ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES


BASEBALL

Hitting gurus from the
margins of the major-
league game have
taught batters a radical
new way to swing,
causing an explosion
in home runs.C5

JASON GAY

A veteran hater
of meetings at
the office now
finds himself
longing for that
next Google
Hangout.C6

WEEKEND
CONFIDENTIAL

A British baroness
and former lady
in waiting to
Princess Margaret
sticks up for
the royal family.C6

‘Black


Swan’


The metaphor for
a rare catastrophe
goes back centuries,
but the birds weren’t
as rare as thought.C3

Inside


ruptions of supply chains is...driving the last
nail into the coffin of the globalists.” Ian
Bremmer, founder of the risk-consultancy
Eurasia Group, sees a starker era ahead, in-
cluding more palpable tension between the
U.S. and China. “Globalization has been the
biggest driver of economic growth,” he says.
“Its trajectory is now shifting, largely for

geopolitical reasons, and that will be accel-
erated by the coronavirus crisis.”
In the midst of our current spiral, it is
hard to resist such dire forecasts. But we
should. There is every reason to think that
our post-coronavirus future will see not an
end to the globalizing trend of recent de-
cades but a new chapter in that story. The

sudden halt in commerce and travel precipi-
tated by the outbreak will not snap back
overnight, and the next few years will see a
re-nationalization of some industries for
countries that can. But when this crisis
passes, we are likely to find fresh confirma-
tion of what we already know about globali-
zation: that it’s easy to hate, convenient to
target and impossible to stop.
Even before the virus, there were indica-
tions of both a pause and a modest pullback
in globalization. Last year, global trade con-
tracted a smidgen, by less than 1%, but at
$19 trillion, it was still higher than any year
before the record-setting 2018. As for China
and the U.S., the dual effect of the Trump
administration’s tariffs and the assertive na-
tionalism of Xi Jinping put a brake on fur-
ther integration. Data from the U.S. Census
Bureau show that the total value of trade in
goods between the two countries declined
from $630 billion in 2017 to $560 billion in


  1. Even so, this pullback just puts the
    U.S. and China back at the trade level of

  2. And that amount, it should be noted,
    Pleaseturntothenextpage


Mr. Karabell is the author, most
recently, of “The Leading Indicators:
A Short History of the Numbers That
Rule Our World” (Simon & Schuster).

From the mid-14th to the early 18th
century, outbreaks of the plague varying
in size from local epidemics to continen-
tal pandemics occurred roughly every
five years in Europe, on average. Accord-
ing to Franco Mormando, a professor of
Italian studies at Boston College who has
studied the role of the plague in Italian
PleaseturntopageC4

An engraving
depicts the 1348
plague as described
by Boccaccio.

A


s Italians confrontthe world’s
deadliest outbreak of the coro-
navirus, under quarantine in
their homes with no clear idea of when
they will come out, not least among their
resources is an unsurpassed heritage of
plague culture.

BYFRANCISX.ROCCA

The Covid-19 pandemic might be closing borders
and disrupting supply chains, but it can’t
stop our long-term movement toward a more
interconnected world.By Zachary Karabell

TheEndof


Globalization?


Don'tCount


OnIt


‘These
were our
ancestors,
we are made
of the
same flesh
and blood.’
FRANCO MORMANDO
Professor of
Italian Studies

Students under a coronavirus lockdown are learning
from masterpieces inspired by Europe’s historic plagues.

In Italy, Contagion


Has Its Own Canon


O


ver the past week, the
coronavirus has gone from
an Asian contagion with
ripple effects on interna-
tional supply chains to a
global pandemic that will
plunge the whole world
into recession. Travel has been halted across
the globe. Borders are shut. Hundreds of
millions of people are in effective lockdown
in the European Union, and the U.S. is head-
ing in that direction. The crisis has erased
trillions of dollars from global stock markets
and imperiled the future of millions of small
businesses around the world, along with the
livelihoods of vast numbers of wage earners.
In the months ahead, we are likely to see
one of the sharpest economic contractions
on record, and the downturn will undoubt-
edly serve as yet more evidence for those
who have argued in recent years that global-
ization is coming to an end, or at least being
rolled back. Nicolas Tenzer, chair of the
Cerap think tank in Paris, argues that the
rising barriers in response to the virus will
strengthen “the populist and nationalist
forces that have long called for reinforcing
borders. It is a true gift for them.” The vet-
eran U.S. market commentator Gary Shilling
recently wrote, “The coronavirus’s depress-
ing effects on the global economy and dis-
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