The Wall Street Journal - 21.03.2020 - 22.03.2020

(Joyce) #1

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


THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC


distancing measures in other
countries.
The government on Friday
announced a few new restric-
tions, including closing public
parks, with some officials ex-
pressing worry that the lock-
down imposed March 10 is too
relaxed and that too many
people are still leaving the
house and mingling. The big
question is whether stopping
the spread of the illness will
require the strict confinement
of large populations in their
homes, as in the worst-af-
fected parts of China.
Italy’s lockdown measures
are due to expire on Apr. 3,
and some even on March 25,
but officials have indicated the
date will be extended.
Italy’s total confirmed coro-
navirus infections, the world’s
second-highest after China, rose
to 47,021 on Friday, an increase
of 15% from the day before.
Once again, most of the
day’s recorded deaths were in
Lombardy, the northern region
at the heart of the disaster in
Italy. A further 381 people
with the coronavirus died in
Lombardy, Friday’s data from
the Italian government
showed.
Lombardy, the wealthy re-
gion that includes Milan, ac-
counts for 47% of Italy’s total
infections but 63% of deaths.

Italy recorded the world’s
highest death toll in a day
from the new coronavirus on
Friday, adding to pressure on
the government to tighten a
lockdown that is showing little
sign of reining in the out-
break.

An additional 627 people
died in Italy, as total deaths in
the country’s epidemic hit
4,032, the most of any coun-
try, compared with 3,248 in
mainland China, where total
recorded infections have been
much higher.
The high death toll in Italy
reflects how the virus has
spread rapidly among its large
cohort of people in their 70s
and 80s, as well as the mount-
ing crisis in hospitals that can
no longer put all severely ill
patients in intensive care.
Across Europe, authorities
are watching whether Italy’s
nationwide quarantine mea-
sures succeed in slowing the
march of the virus. Italy’s
moves, which include shutting
down all but essential services
and ordering people to stay
home except for work or
health necessities, have be-
come the template for social-

ByGiovanni Legorano
in Rome andEric
Sylversin Milan

Italy Faces Mounting


Pressure as Toll Rises


Nuns wait outside the closed Monumental Cemetery of Bergamo.

PIERO CRUCIATTI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES


In the U.S., the Federal Re-
serve has cut short-term inter-
est rates, revived asset pur-
chases and taken action to ease
funding strains in financial
markets. Lawmakers are debat-
ing a Trump administration
plan to send checks directly to
Americans as part of a $1 tril-
lion stimulus package to help
households and businesses.
But there are already signs
of mounting layoffs, with
malls, restaurants and hotels
closing in many areas of the
country.
The British plan, which
echoes policies already ad-
opted by other European
states, is aimed at avoiding
such layoffs, though econo-
mists say some increase in un-
employment is unavoidable as
the havoc wrought by the vi-
rus tips the country toward
recession.
Mr. Sunak, a former hedge
fund executive who has been
in the role of Chancellor of the
Exchequer for less than two
months, said that the govern-
ment will make an interven-
tion in the economy “unprece-
dented in the history of the
British state.”
He said the Treasury will
dish out cash to companies to

cover the cost of 80% of work-
ers’ wages provided they don’t
lay them off as the disease
rages.
The program will be up and
running before the end of
April, will run for at least
three months, and can be ex-
tended, Mr. Sunak said. Pay-
ments are capped at £2,
($2,871) a month. Firms that
need cash immediately can tap
banks for government-backed,
interest-free loans from Mon-

day, he said.
Mr. Sunak said the govern-
ment will finance the pay-
ments with additional borrow-
ing and didn’t put a ceiling on
the amount it is prepared to
spend. Economists at consult-
ing firm Oxford Economics es-
timated the bill for three
months would be around £
billion, depending on takeup.
Mr. Sunak also announced

that firms can defer payment
of value-added tax, a sales tax,
until the end of June, forgoing
for now around £30 billion in
tax revenue. He also increased
out-of-work benefits and said
the self-employed won’t need
to file a tax return until next
year.
Other European govern-
ments have taken similar steps
to aid companies and workers.
Germany has revived a finan-
cial crisis-era program to pay
workers forced to work part-
time or furloughed altogether.
In Denmark, the govern-
ment Sunday said it would pay
75%ofthewagesofworkers
in companies that had been
hard hit by the virus. The
Dutch government has an-
nounced a similar initiative,
which will cover 90% of wages
where businesses would other-
wise have to fire workers.
The fiscal package comes
after the Bank of England on
Thursday cut its benchmark
interest rate to 0.1%, the low-
est level since the central
bank’s foundation in 1694, and
said it would buy £200 billion
of U.K. government bonds to
support the economy and sta-
bilize jittery markets for ster-
ling-denominated assets.

LONDON—The British gov-
ernment stepped up its re-
sponse to the coronavirus epi-
demic, telling companies it
would foot the lion’s share of
their salary bills as long as
they hang on to workers, and
ordering all bars and restau-
rants in the country to close.
The broad package of mea-
sures, announced by Prime
Minister Boris Johnson and
Treasury chief Rishi Sunak,
marks another escalation in
world-wide efforts to fight the
disease and pave the way for
an eventual economic revival.
The salvo by U.K. policy
makers is aimed at preventing
mass layoffs and supporting
workers’ incomes as the coro-
navirus threat—and an inten-
sifying government squeeze to
contain it—shuts down chunks
of British business.
Mr. Johnson said as of Fri-
day all bars, pubs, restaurants,
cafes, gyms and theaters must
shut their doors, an effort to
slow the spread of a virus that
has infected almost 4,000 in
the U.K. and killed 177.
The prime minister’s deci-
sion marks another shift away
from an unorthodox strategy
that had so far avoided strict
measures adopted in other
countries. Mr. Johnson said the
escalation is needed “to push
down further on that curve of
transmission between us.”
He acknowledged Britons
may find it difficult. “We are
taking away the ancient, in-
alienable right of freeborn
people of the United Kingdom
to go to the pub,” he said.
The new measures augment
an economic-policy response
that has already included deep
interest-rate cuts and large-
scale asset purchases by the
Bank of England. The latest
steps add to fiscal commit-
ments that potentially could
reach £400 billion ($459 bil-
lion), or around 16% of the
country’s annual national in-
come.
“We’re going to defeat this
disease with a huge national
effort,” Mr. Johnson said at a
press conference.

BYJASONDOUGLAS

Britain Escalates Its Response


Cafe seats opposite the Houses of Parliament in London. The government ordered all eateries to close.

WILL OLIVER/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK

Thegovernmentsaid
itwillpaycompanies’
salarybills ifthey
hangontoworkers.

Jacob Sanchez
Diagnosed with autism

Lack of speech is a sign of autism.Learn the others at autismspeaks.org/signs.


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