Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Flu Could Possibly Be A Downfall of The Economy Worldwide

In New York, a quick and extensive swine flu epidemic could derail a global economic recovery, and even prolong and deepen the worldwide recession, economists said Monday. "We're not there right now. This has to first become a large-scale pandemic," said James Auger, senior analyst, North America, with IHS Global Insight, a global economic research and forecasting firm. But if the outbreak does grow into a large-scale pandemic, Auger said global trade could be disrupted through export restrictions. "It could lead to travel restrictions for goods and people through major control over ports and airports," he said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said Monday that there were 73 confirmed cases of swine flu worldwide, including 40 in the United States. However, as many as 103 deaths in Mexico have been blamed on the flu, and 1,700 cases are unconfirmed. (CNN.com story) Auger said the impact on market confidence will be more "widely felt." Stock markets in Asia and Europe were mostly lower Monday. After starting with losses, U.S. stocks were mixed at midday. 'It just takes a little bit of bad news right now for sentiment to change," he said.

Auger said some countries had already implemented trade restrictions as a result of the outbreak, which the W.H.O classified as a "public health emergency of international concern" over the weekend.

"We were already seeing a predisposition to protectionism going on," he added. "So some countries could now take advantage of [swine flu] and use it as an excuse to protect their domestic industries."

One example: Russia banned imports of meat products from Mexico, California and Texas as a result of the outbreak.

"It's a very bad time for [the outbreak] to be happening when you want to remove trade restrictions to help economies recover," Auger said.
Tu Packard, senior economist with Moody's Economy.com, said the outbreak could potentially derail chances of a global recovery from the recession.

"We're talking about what's probably the most synchronized global recession in decades," Packard said. "The epicenter is in the United States but it has spread through trade and finance to other countries."

Protecting people: At the same time, those most vulnerable to infectious diseases are also people who have been the most hardhit by the recession in developing and emerging markets, she said.

"It's urgent that we assist these countries to survive the outbreak and the recession," she added.

Packard said she would be "very concerned" if the WHO upgrades the outbreak to a pandemic level in the days ahead.

If that happens, she said governments around the world -- as well as international agencies and groups such as the WHO, United Nations and the Group of 20 economic leaders -- need to show a strong coordinated policy response to stop an "over response" in world markets.

"Failure to do so is something we can't afford," she said. "Markets are strong but they are also jittery. Investors will look for any reason to sell."
In the meantime, Aparna Krishnan, senior analyst (health care) with IHS Global Insight, said the level of preparedness to deal with the swine flu outbreak is "high" compared to the SARS outbreak in 2003.

"In terms of treatments, there's enough stockpiling of drugs," she said. "The main problem is getting an accurate estimate on how many people are infected."

the link is: http://money.cnn.com/2009/04/27/news/international/economy_swineflu/index.htm?postversion=2009042712

4 comments:

  1. This article is crazy... good topic

    ReplyDelete
  2. that swine flu is crazy .. i hope it dont spread over herre. this is a good thing to talk about right now.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Stephanie, This is one of the best articles about how the swine flu could affect the economy worldwide. It focused on something I hadn't even thought about -- the impact on world trade. If you study the history of the Depression in the 1930s, one of the things that made it much, much worse is that countries stopped trading with one another in order to protect their own industries. So global trade really matters right now. I wish you had done more than cut and pasted the article, though. I would have liked a summary and a discussion of what you thought of the article, and the source.

    Grade: 6/10

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sabrina, I absolutely agree that this is an important thing to talk about right now. And I think it's interesting that you chose to comment on a swine flu article since that's what you wrote about, too. Did this article give you any more insight or information about the issue?

    Grade: 2/2

    Nyasia, Why is this article crazy?

    Grade: 1/2

    ReplyDelete