Thursday, March 26, 2020

The Macro View – Health, Economics, and Politics and the Big Picture. What I Am Watching Here And Abroad.


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There is really only one story this week and its impact around the world – COVID-19.
I the US President Trump has suddenly realised he has a serious problem with major cities locked down and economic activity taking a huge hit. He also knows he is really at risk of loosing the election later in the year.
In the UK the lockdown has been dramatically increased a number times and looks to continue in intensity as the death toll rises.
In Australia – stimulus / survival is the name of game and we are also seeing progressively more desperate actions as the case count rises. Now deaths are 12 and 2700+ cases. Not winning so far sadly - despite tighter restriction on everything. (Thurs pm)
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Major Issues.

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Why retirees fear a market plunge

Darren Beesley
Mar 16, 2020 – 9.44am
The spread of coronavirus has been followed by some of the biggest plunges in sharemarkets since the global financial crisis, here in Australia and around the world.
There’s nothing new about a market correction, but for those close to retirement it can be a nerve-racking experience. If you’ve checked your superannuation balance over the past week, you may need a stiff drink.
For investors, or anyone with super, the general advice is to hold your nerve.
Selling out at a low will lock in losses. Market corrections are quite normal and sharemarket pullbacks provide opportunities for investors to buy cheaper stocks that will rise in value over time.
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The RBA's job is to back banks, not bail out gamblers

Stephen Grenville Contributor
Mar 17, 2020 – 12.00am
It’s quite a while since I was at the Reserve Bank, but one of my tasks there was to draft replies to letters received. So let me try my hand at responding to Christopher Joye’s "Virus gets upper hand in battle against central banks" (AFR, March 13).
Dear Christopher,
Thank you for your letters: the RBA is always open for gratuitous advice.
First, to the pandemic itself. You say that "markets have never had to price a real public pandemic". Actually, there have been a number of comparable epidemics. The Spanish flu at the end of World War I killed 30 to 50 million people. The Asian flu in the 1950s (1 to 4 million deaths) didn’t seem to affect financial markets much, but the Hong Kong flu in the '60s sent the S&P down by more than 20 per cent. What about SARS, MERS and Avian flu? If this one is having more impact, perhaps it is because financial markets have made themselves more fragile, with multiple layers of risk-taking and excessive gearing.
You want to fault governments for their containment strategies. Who is doing better – Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea and (belatedly) China, with their active containment, or Italy and Iran with their tardy inadequacies?
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Fear takes over: The chart that shows you just how scared investors are

Stephen Bartholomeusz
Senior business columnist
March 17, 2020 — 11.53am
The 12 per cent fall in the US sharemarket probably says most of what we need to know about the levels of fear coursing through financial markets but, if you wanted a more precise guide, the dramatic spike in the "fear index" on Monday provided it.
The VIX index, which is a forward-looking index that effectively reflects the market’s expectation of volatility over the next 30 days, and therefore provides a measurement of market risk and investor sentiment, soared on Monday to near-record levels.
At 82.69 it was almost 25 points, or about 43 per cent higher than its Friday reading and represents a record closing high. It also puts it within sight of the 89.53 record intraday level it reached on October 24, 2008, when it appeared the world’s financial system was about to collapse. Its long-run average is only 19.2. Before the initial emergence of the coronavirus in mid-February it was below 15.
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Retirees to get super relief, landlords urged to cut rents

Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 21, 2020 – 12.01am
Retirees will be able to keep more of their superannuation nest egg rather than be forced to sell shares into a crashing market, under plans to reduce the amount they must compulsorily draw down each year.
The measure is set to be announced as part of a new and substantial coronavirus assistance package that will also include a multibillion-dollar expansion of the welfare safety net to catch all workers affected – even those not officially sacked but just stood down.
The financial impact of the crisis has become so severe and uncertain that Prime Minister Scott Morrison cancelled the federal budget scheduled for May 12 and pushed it back to October 6, by when the government hopes the turmoil will have ended and it "can set out the path to economic recovery".
At the same time, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg lifted the debt ceiling from $600 billion to $850 billion "to ensure it has the capacity to deal with the ongoing economic impact of the coronavirus".
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The Smart Investor crisis survival toolkit

From superannuation to property to investment markets and aged care, our team of experts explain how to handle a crisis.
Contributors
Mar 21, 2020 – 12.00am
The economy is taking a hit as people stay at home to curtail the spread of the coronavirus.
As customers shy away from restaurants, cafes and shops, and are banned from entertainment venues, company revenues are taking a hit even though costs remain the same.
Amid the fear more companies will have no choice but to stand down or lay off workers, the government is stepping in with a package of measures to support the economy.
These measures, as well as developments in the broader economy, are expected to affect investing, superannuation, property and aged care.
We asked our Smart Investor experts for their views on how to manage the unfolding crisis. This is general advice only. Here's what they had to say:
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Markets learn the hard way: don’t fight the RBA

Christopher Joye Columnist
Mar 20, 2020 – 2.06pm
This was the official family’s finest hour – Australia’s own “Draghi moment” – where historic tensions between Scott Morrison’s government, the Reserve Bank of Australia, the corporate and banking regulators and the banks dissolved as Team Australia came together to battle the greatest economic and human challenge the nation has faced since the Second World War.
Anyone who works in markets understands that this unprecedented and globally synchronised depression in demand and supply – wrought by an entirely alien pathogen – poses far greater hazards than the global financial crisis.
As I repeatedly explained in private communications with the government, the RBA, the banks, and other regulators in late February and early March, the source of this shock was "the inability of markets to price the extreme uncertainty inherent in a 1-in-100 year, deadly global pandemic, which is precipitating outright market failures that are killing liquidity, solvency and ultimately the global economy”.
“Again, this was predictable a week ago [as I had outlined] and is a classic case of Arrow's market failure due to extreme information asymmetries.
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Government, banks go all in to stave off economic disaster

The government's initial stimulus package failed to make an impact. Now Canberra, the RBA and the banks are going all in.
John Kehoe Senior Writer
Mar 21, 2020 – 12.00am
Australians are facing their harshest economic challenge since at least the 1991 "recession we had to have" and quite possibly the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Certainly, the coronavirus health and economic crisis will be a much bigger local shock than the 2008-09 global financial crisis, which left an additional 193,000 Australians unemployed and saw the jobless rate jump 1.9 percentage points to 5.9 per cent within just 10 months.
Strict social distancing rules, the lockdown of Australia's borders and huge uncertainty are quickly suppressing economic activity. While Scott Morrison on Friday tried to reassure the public "there is a way through", it is becoming clear the government's health and economic objectives are – unavoidably – at odds.
"We are in uncharted territory," says Andrew Charlton, an economic adviser to former prime minister Kevin Rudd during the GFC. "We have gone from crisis prevention to crisis mitigation in only one week."
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Why you can't rely on your dividends

Many income investors will be tested financially like never before as savings rates and dividends fall.
Tony Featherstone Finance writer
Mar 21, 2020 – 12.00am
Investors watching their share portfolio tank as the COVID-19 panic escalates should brace for widespread dividend cuts as corporate profits tumble.
With economic recession seemingly inevitable, more companies are withdrawing their revenue and earnings guidance given the uncertainty of a once-in-100-year pandemic that is devastating the global economy and financial markets.
Boral, BlueScope Steel, GPT Group, Mirvac Group and Nine Entertainment (owner of The Australian Financial Review) were the latest this week to withdraw guidance.
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Market meltdown ‘the worst ever’

The most brutal selldown in Australian stockmarket history has left share prices, super funds and share portfolios trading at fractions of their former value as the financial impacts of coronavirus continue to carve through the market.
Even after a rally on Friday that led to double-digit gains for some stocks, the violent plunge over the past month has caused eye-watering losses for some of corporate Australia’s most recognisable names.
For long-term market watchers, the coronavirus collapse has quickly established itself as a rival to the infamous market falls such as the global financial crisis, the Asian financial crisis and the 1987 market crash.
MST Marquee investment strategist Hasan Tevfik said there was a case to be made that the meltdown was the most severe seen on our shores.
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Bushfire Crisis And Climate Policy

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No entries in this category.
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Coronavirus And Impacts.

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Fortress Australia: All overseas arrivals must self-isolate

Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 15, 2020 – 2.48pm
Everyone arriving in Australia from overseas from midnight on Sunday must undergo self-isolation for 14 days as part of a drastic escalation of the nation's response to the coronavirus pandemic.
As well, cruises ships from foreign ports will be banned for at least 30 days and the government will formally adopt a ban recommended on Friday on non-essential, static mass gatherings of more than 500 people.
Limitations on the size of gatherings in enclosed areas such as cinemas are likely to be made on Tuesday, as will restrictions on access to aged care facilities. It is understood a limit of 100 is being contemplated on enclosed gatherings.
The new social distancing provisions also means an end to shaking hands.
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Does closing schools slow the spread of coronavirus? Past outbreaks provide clues

By Jennifer Couzin-Frankel Mar. 10, 2020 , 11:55 AM
As the societal disruptions from COVID-19 spread and intensify, a question for many in the United States is, what about schools? Schools in Japan, Italy, parts of China, and elsewhere have shuttered. A small but increasing number in the United States are following suit, whether for a day, a week, or longer.
But does shutting a school help a broader community, especially when the role played by children in spreading COVID-19 remains uncertain? Nicholas Christakis, a social scientist and physician at Yale University, thinks it does, but he recognizes that questions around closing schools are difficult. Christakis studies social networks and is developing software and statistical methods to forecast an epidemic’s spread before it happens.
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COVID-19 may be more destructive than the Lehman crisis

Coronavirus has triggered a collision of unstable debt and an oil price crash: recession is imminent.
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Mar 11, 2020 – 12.44pm
The coronavirus has set off two parallel "doom loops". An oil price crash is colliding with an unstable edifice of corporate debt.
At the same time the closure of Italy's economic heartland is triggering a surge in Italian risk spreads and an intertwined collapse in European bank shares. The twin shocks come just as markets wake up to the grim reality that the US and Europe have missed their chance to control the pandemic.
A global recession of some form is no longer a tail risk. It is imminent and inescapable. That is the screaming verdict of safe-haven bond markets. The collapse in yields on 30-year US Treasuries to historic lows of 0.51 per cent is a red warning of deflation.
In Europe the trap has closed already. Bund yields fell to minus 0.87 per cent on Monday. The Stoxx Euro 600 banks index slid 11 per cent and is now below the depths of the Lehman crisis.
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ASIC issues emergency trading rules with volumes soaring

By Lucy Battersby
March 16, 2020 — 10.25am
Just before the market open on Monday the Australian Securities and Investments Commission issued an extraordinary rule, telling institutions they must reduce executed trades by a quarter.
"In addition to increasing volumes, Australia’s equity markets have seen exponential increases in the number of trades executed, with a particularly large increase in trades last Friday, 13 March,'' ASIC said in a statement released on Tuesday.
While markets have been able to operate, "there was a significant backlog of work" for exchanges and trading participants. The massive increase in trading is largely due to high frequency trading, which saw 6 million trades across the ASX and Chi-X on Friday compared to an average of 1.5 million trades.
"If the number of trades executed continues to increase, it will put strain on the processing and risk management capabilities of market infrastructure and market participants."
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Morrison government’s response is pitifully inadequate

A website has been created for musicians and others in the entertainment industry to post how they are affected by the coronavirus, called I Lost My Gig Australia (ilostmygig.net.au). Here’s the tally up to Sunday night: number of events cancelled - 10,468; jobs impacted - 84,000; lost income - $25 million.
On Sunday night Senator Peter Whish-Wilson tweeted: “My wife’s small biz is considering closing in line with isolation measures but their wage bill alone for the next two weeks is around $40g, so with no revenue coming in they are buggered.”
Someone tweeted in reply: “Same... 12 employees. What do I do? We employee people on a promise. They build their lives around pay cheques. We have NO revenue now for 3 months as EVERYTHING has been cancelled or postponed. Horrible time... how do I support my employees?”
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16 March, 2020

Economic impact ‘beyond’ GFC

Scott Morrison has warned the economic damage from the coronavirus will be “well beyond” that of the global financial crisis, as markets tumbled further on Monday morning despite the Federal Reserve slashing rates to zero and pledging to pump hundreds of billions of dollars into the economy.
The Prime Minister told 3AW this morning repeated the health crisis “is going to have very significant economic impacts”.
He then went further, suggesting the hit to the economy could eclipse that dealt during the 2008-09 crisis.
“This is nothing like the GFC. This has gone well beyond that now. I mean, in the GFC, we didn’t have to shut down the borders. In the GFC, we didn’t have to stop mass gathering of the public. I mean, this is of an order well beyond what we saw last time. And it’ll be a challenging period. But, you know, Australians will come through,” Mr Morrison said.
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How coronavirus became a corporate credit run

Today, it is not Wall Street financial institutions, but companies in a variety of industries that are stressed, as a simultaneous supply and demand shock means they need to tap credit lines to pay their bills.
Rana Foroohar Columnist
Mar 16, 2020 – 10.27am
It was only hours after US president Donald Trump told us, in an address from the Oval Office last week, “this is not a financial crisis”, when markets began acting very much as though it was.
Investors dumped assets resulting in the worst trading day since 1987. Bond markets seized up, putting pressure on banks, and the US Federal Reserve swooped in with yet more emergency funding for short-term borrowing markets (known as repurchasing or repo markets), a tactic which suggests we may see quantitative easing to infinity — and beyond.
It followed up on Monday (AEDT) with another emergency interest rate cut and further liquidity operations.
So when exactly does a coronavirus-triggered corporate market meltdown officially turn into a full-blown financial crisis? That’s a question many market participants, and banks in particular, must be asking themselves.
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Dire Chinese economic data reveals devastating coronavirus hit

Don Weinland and Xinning Liu
Mar 16, 2020 – 4.44pm
Beijing | China’s industrial output fell to its lowest level on record in the first two months of this year and urban unemployment hit its highest rate ever in February, as the coronavirus brought the world’s second-largest economy to a standstill.
Industrial output tumbled by 13.5 per cent in the first two months of this year and the urban unemployment rate surged to 6.2 per cent in February, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday.
The latest economic data also showed that China retail sales plummeted by 20.5 per cent year-on-year in January and February, and fixed asset investment fell by 24.5 per cent, down from 5.4 per cent growth when the data were last reported.
The numbers came in far below analysts’ expectations, with many China experts expressing surprise that government officials were willing to report such devastating figures.
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Most world airlines 'bankrupt by the end of May'

Hans van Leeuwen Europe correspondent
Mar 17, 2020 – 4.08am
London | The coronavirus pandemic will bankrupt most of the world's airlines by the end of May, the Centre for Aviation has warned, urging coordinated government and industry action to avert "a catastrophe".
"Many airlines have probably already been driven into technical bankruptcy, or are at least substantially in breach of debt covenants", the centre, known by its acronym CAPA, said in a statement on Monday.
"Cash reserves are running down quickly as fleets are grounded, and what flights there are operate much less than half full."
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The toilet paper hoarders turned out to be right

As grocery shortages extend to pasta, rolled oats and cough mixture, what can be done to end the supermarket aisle crisis?
Aaron Patrick Senior Correspondent
Mar 16, 2020 – 6.12pm
They have been derided as irrational, selfish or just plain nutty. Turns out, the hoarders are getting the last laugh.
As recently as a week ago, political and business leaders assured Australians there was no need for panic buying.
The toilet-paper factories were working around the clock to keep the nation sanitary, we were told. Keep calm and carry on wiping.
On Monday, the toilet paper shortage had spread to tissues and was threatening paper towels. In economics, they call it the substitution effect.
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Trump orders tough new rules, stops short of full shut down

Jacob Greber United States Correspondent
Mar 17, 2020 – 7.43am
Washington | Warning the coronavirus disruption could last until August and acknowledging the growing recession risk, President Donald Trump issued a series of hard-line recommendations that Americans severely curb their movement for the next 15 days.
While he stopped short of a complete France- or Italy-style shutdown, Mr Trump signalled that the administration's "tough stance" may just be a beginning.
In a White House briefing that sent Wall Street to worse ever points decline - and largest percentage falls since 1987, with key indexes shedding more than 12 per cent - officials said their latest recommendations aren't "an overreaction".
"This afternoon we're announcing new guidelines for every American to follow over the next 15 days," Mr Trump said.
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Australia is headed for a shutdown, it's just a question of how fast

Every time new restrictions are imposed to preserve public health, it snuffs out the livelihoods of thousands.
Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 16, 2020 – 6.18pm
Inexorably, Australia is headed for shutdown.
Every time you think the situation has levelled out for a while at least, it changes, rapidly.
On Sunday morning, Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy said it was still OK to shake hands. Not so by dinner time.
On Friday, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg was playing down as most unlikely the need for more economic stimulus before the May 12 budget.
By Monday, the Treasurer, Mathias Cormann and Prime Minister Scott Morrison were finalising plans to roll out billions more by the end of this week, so any legislation, along with the legislation for the $17.6 billion trundled out last week, can be passed when a severely truncated Parliament sits next week.
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Get ready, a bigger disruption is coming

Pankaj Mishra
Mar 17, 2020 – 6.47am
As global supply chains break, airlines slash flights, borders rise within nation-states, stock exchanges convulse with fear, and recession looms over economies, from China to Germany, Australia to the United States, we can no longer doubt that we are living through extraordinary times.
What remains in question, however, is our ability to comprehend them while using a vocabulary derived from decades when globalisation seemed a fact of nature, like air and wind. For the coronavirus signals a radical transformation, of the kind that occurs once in a century, shattering previous assumptions.
In fact, the last such churning occurred almost exactly a century ago, and it altered the world so dramatically that a revolution in the arts, sciences and philosophy, not to mention the discipline of economics, was needed even to make sense of it.
The opening years of the 20th century, too, were defined by a free global market for goods, capital and labour. This was when, as John Maynard Keynes famously reminisced, "the inhabitant of London could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth".
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Australia prepares for 50,000 to 150,000 coronavirus deaths

By Dana McCauley, Eryk Bagshaw and Rob Harris
March 16, 2020 — 7.44pm
Up to 150,000 Australians could die from the coronavirus under a worst case scenario, the Morrison government says, as it considers advice on restricting visits to pubs, cinemas and aged care homes.
Deputy Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly said that the number of infections would range between 20 per cent to 60 per cent of the population. He urged the public to comply with social distancing measures such as avoiding large gatherings of 500 or more people.
"This is an infectious disease," Professor Kelly said in Canberra. "The more we can do to separate people and stop the disease spreading, the better. The death rate is around 1 per cent. You can do the maths."
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Dutch embrace 'herd immunity' as dire death warning prompts UK to change course

By Bevan Shields
March 17, 2020 — 11.13am
London: The Netherlands will embrace a "herd immunity" strategy to combat the coronavirus pandemic, just as Britain backs away from its own plans to manage rather than suppress the disease following warnings of 250,000 deaths.
In remarks that make him the first world leader to publicly back the herd immunity theory, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said a mass lockdown was not feasible and the country had instead opted for a plan that included "controlled distribution" of COVID-19 "among groups that are least at risk".
Herd immunity is a scenario in which so many people become resistant to a certain disease it becomes much harder for it to spread to the rest of the population.
However mass immunity is typically achieved through vaccinations rather than via exposure and recovery. Experts have warned that allowing coronavirus to sweep through younger and healthier members of the public is a dangerous way of building resistance in the community.
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Far from bouncing back, China's economy may be shrinking

Peter Hartcher
Political and international editor for The Sydney Morning Herald
March 17, 2020 — 12.00am
The world watched somewhat smugly as China descended into grim shutdown to defeat the virus. Now the world is watching anxiously as it recovers.
China was the main locomotive of growth in the world economy over the past decade. As the globe heads into recession, governments worldwide hope that the Middle Kingdom Express will soon return to normal and pull the world out of it.
But will it? And, if so, when? Forget the official rhetoric from Beijing. No experienced China watcher takes that seriously. So a widely followed American Sinologist, Bill Bishop, author of the Sinocism newsletter, has set a threefold test. Beijing will actually believe that it has overcome the virus and is returning to normal when these three things happen, according to Bishop: One, President Xi Jinping visits virus central, the city of Wuhan. Two, the schools reopen. Three, the government announces the dates for the annual "twin sessions" of China's political elites, the National People's Congress and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Committee.
The first test was met last week. Xi visited Wuhan. He didn't exactly go on a street walk to greet his grateful people. Official media said that he greeted patients and health workers. But TV footage showed otherwise. Xi stood in a big, bare room at a command centre waving to patients over a video link. Even then he was wearing a 3M N95 face mask, an upgrade on the basic surgical mask he's worn in Beijing recently. Test two? There are signs that some parts of China are preparing to reopen schools, but this is not yet a clear "yes". And there's no sign of dates for the twin sessions.
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School closures ‘unlikely to slow coronavirus spread’

There is limited evidence to show school closures are likely to be effective in slowing the spread of COVID-19.
One variable that makes it difficult to assess the impact of school closures on reducing transmission of the virus is that little is understood about children’s role in spreading coronavirus.
As Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton said on Monday: “There is currently limited information on the contribution of children to transmission of COVID-19.
 “The World Health Organisation-China Joint Mission noted the primary role of household transmission and observed that children tended to be infected from adults.”
A researcher in Australia who contributed to one of the most thorough mathematical modelling papers assessing responses to an outbreak of viral respiratory disease, associate professor James Wood from the School of Public Health and Community Medicine at the University of NSW, said the effect of school closures was likely to be “modest”. “You have to remember that closing schools means that children redistribute their contacts in the household and community,” he said in a blog post.
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Coronavirus: Focus on herd immunity ‘a fatal mistake’

Relying on herd immunity to protect the community from coronavirus would result in widespread deaths among the elderly and a higher number of deaths in young­er people as well.
That’s the view of medical experts who believe social distancing is the only reasonable response to the rapid spread of COVID-19.
The chief scientific adviser to the British government, Patrick Vallance, triggered controversy when he appeared to indicate the UK was set to pursue an approach that would allow millions of Britons to be infected, boosting eventual herd immunity.
 “Our aim is to try and reduce the peak (of the infections), broaden the peak, not suppress it completely,” Sir Patrick told the BBC on Friday. “Also, because the vast majority of people get a mild illness, to build up some kind of herd immunity so more people are ­immune to this disease and we ­reduce the transmission.”
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Harsh lessons from offshore haven't been learnt

Several readers of this column have condemned me for criticising a government trying its best in a difficult time. Guilty as charged.
Jennifer Hewett Columnist
Mar 17, 2020 – 3.52pm
Friends arrived home this week from a holiday in Bangkok – after the government’s mandatory self-quarantining rule came into effect.
Their time in Thailand meant they were well used to regular temperature checks, including at the airport, questioning about any symptoms, and abundant supplies of hand sanitisers in public places. Until that is, they got back to Sydney Airport.
No temperature testing, no questioning about symptoms or travel history, no soap left in the airport bathrooms and no advice beyond two small pro-forma guides informing them they could all go home (somehow) and still mix with family members there.
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Strict bans on travel, groups; PM warns crisis will last six months

Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 18, 2020 – 11.25am
Australians are banned from travelling overseas, indoor gatherings of more than 100 people are forbidden, access to aged-care facilities is being severely restricted and even Anzac Day ceremonies are being called off, as the government ramps up the fight against coronavirus.
A sombre Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy warned more restrictions were to come but cautioned that society and the economy as a whole would not be shut down overnight.
"There is no two-week answer to what we're confronting. There is no short-term, quick fix to how this is dealt with in Australia,'' Mr Morrison said.
Mr Morrison blasted as "ridiculous" and "un-Australian'' those who were hoarding food and supplies.
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How to stop the global recession becoming a depression

In war, governments spend freely. Now, too, they must mobilise their resources to prevent a disaster. Think big. Act now. Together.
Martin Wolf
Updated Mar 18, 2020 – 10.34am, first published at 10.32am
The pandemic was not unexpected. But reality always differs from expectations. This is not just a threat to health. It may also be a bigger economic threat than the financial crisis of 2008-09.
Dealing with it will require strong and intelligent leadership. Central banks have made a good start. The onus now falls on governments. No event better demonstrates why a quality administrative state, led by people able to differentiate experts from charlatans, is so vital to the public.
A central question is how deep and long the health emergency will be. One hope is that locking down countries (as in Spain) or parts of countries (as in China) will eliminate the virus. Yet, even if this proved to be true in some places, it will clearly not be true everywhere.
An opposite extreme is that up to 80 per cent of the world’s population could be infected. At a possible mortality rate of 1 per cent, that could mean 60 million additional deaths, equivalent to the second world war. This calamity would probably also take time: the Spanish flu of 1918 came in three waves, over a year. Yet it is more likely that this ends up in the middle: the death rate will be lower, but the disease will also not disappear.
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Shutdown sparks solvency fears for investors

The government's's latest economic shutdowns mean solvency is suddenly a real concern in the growing number of sectors where cash is drying up.  
Mar 18, 2020 – 11.26am
The latest stage of the lockdown of the Australian economy should send a brutal message for Australian investors.
Your models for estimating a company’s value have been smashed up. Solvency is suddenly a real concern in the growing number of sectors where cash is drying up.
Even before Prime Minister Scott Morrison stood up on Wednesday to announce fresh bans on gatherings, the dominoes were falling on the ASX.
Companies worth more than $35 billion announced they had withdrawn their profit guidance for financial year 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic spares few sectors of the economy.
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What the government and RBA can do to save the economy

It's time for all hands to the economic pump as the coronavirus causes the single largest globally synchronised drop in demand-side activity since WWII.
Christopher Joye Columnist
Mar 17, 2020 – 4.43pm
We are in the eye of the worst financial storm in modern market history, which has vaporised the liquidity of all asset-classes, including government bonds, equities and credit.
The good news is that Coolabah Capital's data scientists' analysis suggests we might pass through it over the next month.
One key turning point will be when the infection and mortality rates recorded in the world’s largest economy, the US, materially decelerate. Examining our live data feeds from South Korea and China (excluding Hubei), the peak infection and death rates have occurred within two to three weeks of them noticeably ramping up on a daily basis.
This time horizon assumes the US can effectively contain and mitigate the virus as well as the South Koreans have done.
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Josh Frydenberg faces the fight of his life

The Treasurer has conscripted top officials of the RBA, big banks and power companies to work out plans to shield hundreds of thousands of businesses from bankruptcy.
Karen Maley Columnist
Mar 18, 2020 – 12.01am
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has been holding emergency discussions with senior officials from the Reserve Bank and Treasury, and top officials from the country's big banks in a bold effort to stave off bankruptcy for hundreds of thousands of businesses that are seeing their cash flows dry up as a result of the coronavirus shutdown.
People close to the talks say Frydenberg is working hard to come up with a workable scheme that will ensure that businesses and workers continue to receive income to tide them through an extended period of economic shutdown.
Economists estimate that economic activity could plunge about 10 per cent, as happened in China when Beijing's efforts to contain the spread of the coronavirus brought the country to a standstill. Official figures released this week show that Chinese industrial production fell 13.5 per cent in the first two months of the year, compared with the same period in 2019, and retail sales plunged 20.5 per cent.
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Construction 'on brink of collapse', says John Holland CEO

Jenny Wiggins Infrastructure Reporter
Mar 18, 2020 – 12.00am
John Holland chief executive Joe Barr says the construction industry is on the brink of collapse and is not sustainable after the builder of Melbourne's West Gate Tunnel and the Sydney Metro reported a $59.6 million annual loss.
“I won’t sugar coat it," Mr Barr told The Australian Financial Review. "Tier one contractors in Australia are not making any money, and governments across Australia keep having successive project cost blowouts."
“We are in the midst of Australia’s biggest infrastructure boom, but as an industry, we are teetering on the brink of collapse."
John Holland, which is owned by China Communications Construction Company and operates in New Zealand and south-east Asia as well as Australia, delivered the after-tax net loss for the 12 months to December after reporting profit of $84.2 million a year earlier.
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World will suffer a recession: S&P

By Shane Wright
March 18, 2020 — 11.29am
The world will suffer a global economic recession because of the coronavirus pandemic, ratings' agency S&P Global has warned with Australia's unemployment likely to push to the highest level since 1998.
The agency said new data out of China, which showed industrial production there collapsing by 12.3 per cent through January and February, pointed to the economic impact that would flow to other countries as they responded to the coronavirus.
It believes the global economy will grow by between one and 1.5 per cent this year, below global population growth. America was facing a year of either zero growth or a fall of 0.5 per cent while China's economy would likely only grow by 3.2 per cent.
S&P chief economist Paul Gruenwald said it was clear that as countries were forced to close down their economies to deal with the virus, the financial impact would be severe.
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The projection that changed UK virus plan

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled much more stringent measures to tackle the coronavirus outbreak after research indicated a quarter of a million people would have died under previous plans to control the pandemic.
The modelling study, by Imperial College, and led by Professor Neil Ferguson, an expert on the spread of infectious diseases, was published on March 16.
It helped change the British government's position, according to those involved with the decision. The government said it had accelerated its plans on "the advice of the experts".
Below are some of the findings of the research:
* If no action had been taken against the virus it would have caused 510,000 deaths in Britain and 2.2 million in the United States, the study said.
"The epidemic is predicted to be broader in the US than in the UK and to peak slightly later. This is due to the larger geographic scale of the US, resulting in more distinct localised epidemics across states," the study said.
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Medicos petition government for radical coronavirus lockdowns

Thousands of doctors are begging the federal government to impose radical lockdowns that confine people to their homes, amid warnings that Australia is heading for an Italian-style disaster that would cripple our health systems.
More than 2500 doctors have signed a letter urging that all places where people gather be closed, including schools, pubs, restaurants, churches and cinemas. A separate letter signed by almost 4000 more people, most of them medics, warns that unless strict social distancing was implemented, Australia would be “in a worse position than Italy is in”.
In the first letter, written by Perth GP Hemant Garg, doctors urge a near total lockdown of society. “We immediately recommend a three- to four-week closure of schools, cultural and religious places (including places of worship), gyms and leisure centres, pubs, bars, theatres, cinemas and concert halls,” the letter said.
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Forget stimulus, it's solvency and survival now

The top end of town and the suburbs are at different points of the same basic problem - actually surviving this temporary shock to see the promised recovery.
Mar 19, 2020 – 12.00am
How do you get a haircut in a world of social isolation?
This was one of the many questions I had as I wandered past the barber on the main shopping strip of my eastern Melbourne suburb with the government’s latest economic shutdown measures front of mind, and Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s warning of a six-month war against COVID-19 ringing in my ears.
Having spent Wednesday morning watching a barrage of ASX-listed companies reveal the hit they’ve taken from the pandemic – withdrawing profit guidance, dumping deals and restructuring operations – I was fascinated to see how life was progressing in the suburbs.
While people are getting on with things, it was a worrying picture. The top end of town and the suburbs have the same basic problem: solvency.
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PM's welfare wage to rescue the jobless

Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 19, 2020 – 12.01am
Hundreds of thousands of workers who face losing their jobs due to the coronavirus crisis will be given fast access to a new, temporary wage that will be set at a higher rate than the dole.
The new transitional income support will be a central feature of a forthcoming package that will be more about survival than stimulus, and which, sources say, will dwarf last week's $17.6 billion package of economic measures aimed at stimulating supply and demand.
Similar survival assistance for small and medium businesses will be the other focus of the new package. As The Australian Financial Review reported on Tuesday, The government has been in discussions with the banks about debt relief measures ranging from underwritng loans and repayment holidays in return for cash payments.
The government is rushing to finalise the measures so they can be legislated alongside the $17.6 billion stimulus package when a scaled-back Parliament sits briefly next week.
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Stick to paracetamol, coronavirus patients recovering at home told

By Melissa Cunningham and Liam Mannix
March 18, 2020 — 4.43pm
If you're looking for relief from coronavirus symptoms, take paracetamol rather than ibuprofen, and avoid non-evidence-based treatments being promoted on social media, health experts recommend.
Australian doctors typically treat patients with a fever – one of the key symptoms of COVID-19 – with the painkiller paracetamol, often sold as Panadol.
Paracetamol provides quick relief from symptoms and is relatively safe.
In other countries, doctors regularly use the anti-inflammatory ibuprofen, often sold here as Nurofen, instead.
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Restaurants, pubs, venues face 'devastating' six months

By Eryk Bagshaw and Nick Bonyhady
March 18, 2020 — 8.00pm
Australia's restaurants, pubs, cinemas and theatres face six months of ruin as the coronavirus forces the government to ban indoor gatherings of more than 100 people and the national cabinet considers further measures to stop people socialising.
In an escalation of the containment strategy that distinguishes Australia from the rest of the world, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the longer-term restriction of entertainment activities would allow schools and supermarkets to keep functioning and avoid the total lockdown of society sweeping through Europe.
"There is no short-term quick fix to how this is dealt with in Australia," said Mr Morrison. "The idea that you can just turn everything off for two weeks and then just turn it all back on again and it all goes away, that is not the evidence."
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Britain shuts down all schools amid coronavirus pandemic

By Bevan Shields
March 19, 2020 — 4.48am
London: Prime Minister Boris Johnson has ordered the closure of all schools in Britain in a fresh response to the coronavirus pandemic that could put Australia under more pressure to follow.
The United Kingdom and Australia had for several weeks shared the view that keeping schools open was the best option, citing expert modelling that concluded shutting them would do little to stop the spread of COVID-19 and risked taking parents away from frontline emergency services jobs.
However Downing Street altered course on Wednesday (Thursday AEDT) and announced all public schools, private schools and childcare centres would close indefinitely from Friday afternoon.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the 'curve' of infection growth was still too sharp and keeping millions of children at home would help lower the pressure on the National Health Service.
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'It's not magical': Pandemic modeller demystifies Australia's coronavirus strategy

By Kate Aubusson
March 19, 2020 — 8.39am
A pandemic modeller advising the Australian government has declined to tell the public how many Australians they expect to die or become critically unwell in the course of the coronavirus crisis.
But Professor Jodie McVernon, director of epidemiology at the Doherty Institute, has shed light on the behind-the-scenes work, including the reason the government is keeping schools open and why their worst-case scenario has proven correct.
She is part of a team of pandemic modellers, infectious disease and public health experts advising the government every day on its coronavirus response for the past eight weeks.
"We are not coming to these questions naively or without prior thought. [We are] coming with tools we've prepared earlier," she said.
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Aussie billionaire investor warns of 'devastating economic collapse'

By Charlotte Grieve
March 19, 2020 — 9.10am
The chairman of $100 billion investment house Magellan Financial Group, Hamish Douglass, has warned of a near total shutdown of the world economy over the next two to six months, calling on governments to increase stimulus packages while taking emergency measures to avoid a depression.
In a note to clients, Mr Douglass said the impact of the deadly coronavirus was a "fast-moving and fluid" situation as Australia's dollar plummets below 60 cents and the ASX continues to fall, having lost more than $665 billion in value so far over the past four weeks.
Mr Douglass said the potential financial and social consequences are "very concerning" and that for many small businesses and those that have high financial leverage, the crisis "could prove fatal". "Only governments can prevent these businesses from failing," he said.
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Australia ‘on track to mirror Europe’ in coronavirus case explosion

10:45PM March 18, 2020
Experts are warning that Australia is on track to see an explosion of coronavirus cases similar to that being experienced in Europe, with new research revealing the vast majority of COVID-19 cases may be undetected in the community.
An extra 57 COVID-19 cases were confirmed in NSW on Wednesday, bringing the total in the state to 267, while Victoria recorded 27 new cases. Queensland’s case count rose to 94. Western Australia now has 35 COVID-19 cases, South Australia has 32, Tasmania has seven, the ACT three and the NT has one.
Research published on Wednesday in the academic journal Science estimated that as many as 86 per cent of all COVID-19 infections in China prior to lockdowns instituted in late January were not documented.
Undocumented infections are those that are asymptomatic or of such mild symptoms that the ­infected person does not seek medical care or obtain a diagnosis.
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Scott Morrison bans non-citizens from entering Australia

19 March 2020

Border controls hardened

All foreign nationals will now be banned from entering Australia due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Scott Morrison has hardened the closure of the nation’s borders, after earlier this week forcing all new entrants into Australia to self-isolate for 14 days.
All Australian citizens, residents and direct family members will still be able to enter the country, but will have to self-isolate.
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A $105b bridge across the chasm

Mar 19, 2020 – 7.08pm
The Reserve Bank and Morrison government have committed $105 billion to build a financial bridge over a growing chasm in the Australian economy, cutting interest rates to record lows, offering cheap loans to banks and small businesses and embarking on the first major quantitative easing program the country has seen.
After cutting the official cash rate by 0.25 percentage points to 0.25 per cent Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe said circumstances were so "extraordinary" that the cash rate was likely to remain at the record low for another three years.
The central bank announced a bond buying program as well as a fresh $90 billion line of credit to banks with incentives to pass on cheap rates to small and medium sized businesses. The government has provided $15 billion to small banks and non-bank institutions to help with their funding.
"To help us get to the other side we need a bridge," Dr Lowe said on Thursday. "Without that bridge, there will be more damage, some of which will be permanent, to the economy and to people's lives. We are expecting significant job losses."
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Australia's 'whatever it takes' moment

John Kehoe Senior Writer
Mar 19, 2020 – 6.48pm
Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe, the Morrison government and banks are "pulling together" for an unprecedented crisis facing the Australian economy, making extraordinary interventions to stop the financial system freezing, and to fight a devastating recession.
The RBA chief and Prime Minister Scott Morrison pledge to build a "bridge" to an eventual economic recovery, but they know the next six months will be painful.
Hundreds of thousands of people will lose their jobs and small-business income due to the coronavirus locking down large sections of the economy. Tellingly, Lowe admits the job losses will be "significant" and the situation is "very serious".
The boldest policy move so far is the RBA creating $90 billion out of thin air to lend to commercial banks at an ultra-low interest rate of 0.25 per cent for three years, for banks to on-lend to small businesses and companies facing the coronavirus crisis.
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'I'm an ER doctor. The coronavirus is already overwhelming us'

Emergency healthcare workers are used to reacting in a crisis, working long hours and making life and death decisions - that's their job. But the coronavirus crisis is a different kind of test.
Michelle Romeo
Mar 19, 2020 – 11.01pm
I'm on my eighth hour Saturday working in suffocating protective gear - mask, face shield, gown and gloves - when an elderly patient is wheeled into room 23 of my hospital's emergency department. He's confused and gasping for air as his family tells me over the phone that he doesn't want any "heroic measures" performed: no aggressive resuscitation, no breathing tube. Under normal circumstances, there are a few tricks I might try before I have to put a breathing tube down someone's airway and connect them to a ventilator, which breathes for them.
But now those less-invasive breathing interventions could wind up spraying contagious viral particles into the air, putting my other patients at risk of contacting this patient's presumed illness, COVID-19. So I place a simple breathing mask over his frail face while I watch his oxygen levels fall below a viable level. At that point, I lock eyes with the supervising ER doctor standing nearby, and he dismally mutters: "This is only the beginning."
He's right, and that's my worry. This patient is the first of many who are about to come to us, suffering.
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How to flatten the coming bankruptcy curve

Without deep co-operation between government, business and stakeholders we are heading for a death spiral of company failures.
Mark Korda
Mar 20, 2020 – 12.00am
The federal government and the business community urgently need to flatten the bankruptcy curve to prevent catastrophic damage to Australia’s businesses.
Ultimately, it is people’s jobs and livelihoods at risk.
A tidal wave of business failures threatens to do more damage to more people than the health impact of the coronavirus.
Thousands of businesses have been hit with an overnight disappearance of revenue with no reduction in fixed costs. Nothing like this has happened before.
The Commonwealth has announced important measures for small business and more is likely to be on the way. But the big numbers are in the medium and large businesses.
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Government relents on Newstart, concedes recession likely

Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 19, 2020 – 3.10pm
The government has dropped its longstanding opposition to increasing the Newstart allowance, at least temporarily, and has shut the nation's borders to foreigners for at least six months, as it continues to grapple with the escalating coronavirus crisis.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg also conceded for the first time that a recession was now "very hard to avoid''.
After The Australian Financial Review revealed the impending economic assistance package would contain an income payment higher than the current rate of the dole for those who lose their jobs, Scott Morrison indicated on Thursday the increase would be extended to existing Newstart recipients.
The extension would be granted for at least for six months, which is the forecast duration of the virus crisis.
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'Hell is coming': Billionaire Bill Ackman sent sharemarket spiralling

Theron Mohamed
Mar 20, 2020 – 7.18am

Key Points

  • Bill Ackman warned on Wednesday of mass casualties, industries collapsing, and a deep recession if the US government doesn’t impose a nationwide shutdown to slow the spread of coronavirus.
  • The billionaire hedge fund manager’s emotional, nearly half-hour CNBC interview pushed an already-vulnerable sharemarket near intraday lows.
  • Ackman also revealed that he was buying shares, sparking accusations that he was manipulating the market to drive stock prices down or profit from short bets.
  • A list of the Pershing Square Capital chief’s most striking comments is below.
Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman warned on Wednesday that millions of Americans would die, industries would collapse, and the US economy would tumble into a deep recession unless there’s a 30-day nationwide shutdown to slow the spread of coronavirus.
The Pershing Square Capital chief’s dire warnings, laid out during an emotional, half-hour CNBC interview, pushed a vulnerable stock market to intraday lows.
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Record increase in Australian coronavirus cases

Mar 19, 2020 – 6.49pm
Australia's confirmed cases of the deadly coronavirus increased by a record amount on Thursday – to more than 700 – as senior government health advisers remained optimistic that behavioural changes would stop the trajectory seen in the US and the UK.
Deputy Commonwealth chief medical officer Paul Kelly acknowledged Australia was currently following trend lines seen in other countries battling to contain COVID-19, but described the mandatory 14-days quarantine for thousands of travellers and low community transmission as the way to slow the spread.
"It is not surprising at the moment, given that almost all of our cases still have come from overseas, that we're following a similar curve to those overseas countries," Professor Kelly said.
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RBA has fired its shots. Now time for government's overwhelming force

By Shane Wright
March 19, 2020 — 8.06pm
The Reserve Bank fired has fired its biggest cannon shot in the war to keep the Australian economy afloat.
It's now for the Morrison government to provide the cavalry, ground troops, baggage train and a couple of kitchen sinks.
Reserve Bank Governor Phil Lowe addressed the media on Thursday warning of financial fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.
Make no doubt about it, the RBA is in a situation it never thought it would find itself or wanted to be in.
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UTS freezes spending and flags up to $100 million losses

By Natassia Chrysanthos
March 19, 2020 — 4.33pm
The University of Technology Sydney has deferred capital works and frozen recruitment to preserve cash amid the coronavirus pandemic, while it increases investment in measures that can bring teaching in line with social distancing.
Vice-Chancellor Attila Brungs wrote to staff on Thursday, announcing the university would "take some more extensive actions" to safeguard itself against up to $100 million losses brought about by the pandemic.
These also include a freeze on all non-critical travel, consulting and discretionary spending.
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RBA throws $100 billion Hail Mary to save the Australian economy

By Shane Wright, Eryk Bagshaw and Rob Harris
March 19, 2020 — 9.03pm
One hundred billion dollars will be thrown at the economy and interest rates held at record lows for years in a last-ditch effort to keep businesses alive as the government prepares to boost payments to workers sacked because of the coronavirus pandemic.
As Treasurer Josh Frydenberg admitted it would be hard for Australia to avoid its first recession in 29 years, the RBA cut official interest rates to 0.25 per cent, revealed plans to buy government debt to keep borrowing rates low and said it would lend at least $90 billion to banks on the proviso they passed on that cash to small and medium sized businesses.
The federal government is pumping $15 billion into small lenders, also aimed at the business sector, as it puts the finishing touches to its own massive support package that will also contain direct assistance to those pushed out of work.
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'Not even worth opening your doors': Shopping malls turn into ghost towns as coronavirus hits retail

By Simon Johanson and Carolyn Cummins
March 20, 2020 — 10.30am
"It's diabolical," says clothing retailer Joe Bertuna as he looks out on the empty halls of Australia’s largest shopping centre in Chadstone. "It's not even worth opening your doors."
"We can't last much longer," says another trader selling fried chicken in what is normally a bustling food court at another of Melbourne's large malls - Northland. "I haven't paid my rent this month. I've been here for 21 years now, and not ever once have I missed the rent," he told The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.
The mall, usually bustling with people, is like a ghost town with solitary shoppers wandering past empty stores. The eerie quiet is echoed in Sydney's northern beaches in the usually crammed Westfield Warringah Mall.
There, one ladies' fashion chain staffer says she has not "seen anyone for hours". At a nearby beauty salon, liked by landlords as an 'internet-proof' tenant, a beautician says "I've never seen it like this".
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Buckle up for hell of a bumpy ride

It’s the response to COVID-19 that’s generating an almost certain recession, rather than the virus itself.
 “Recessions kill people, too,” says Bob Gregory, who has seen his share of economic downturns, and knows the social havoc they can wreak.
The 80-year-old emeritus professor of economics at the Australian National University — and former Reserve Bank of Australia board member — says while recessions invariably lead to collapses in income and employment, that in turn fuels suicide, alcoholism and social breakdown.
“The big deficits will crimp future­ investment in hospitals and that kind of public infrastructure that saves lives,” he says.
The octogenarian, currently holed up in his Canberra home — “the university is frightened I’ll die if I come in” — was on the RBA board for a decade to 1995, during the economic turmoil of the 1991 recession that threw an extra 500,000 people onto the dole queue within 12 months.
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Federal budget delayed as PM upgrades indoor restrictions, flags further travel bans

By Eryk Bagshaw
Updated March 20, 2020 — 3.30pmfirst published at 2.29pm
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has delayed the federal budget, ordered limits of one person per four square metres in indoor venues and warned further domestic travel restrictions are coming.
Mr Morrison confirmed the national cabinet had agreed to a cap of one person per four square metres for indoor gatherings, including in pubs, cafes and restaurants, as was recommended by Australia's chief medical officers last week.
"If you've got a room, if you've got a premises that's 100 square metres, then you can have 25 people in that room," he said.
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It's the Coronacession: We’re closing down the economy, under doctors’ orders

Ross Gittins
Economics Editor
March 21, 2020 — 12.08am
It’s now clear that we – like most countries – are already in a recession that promises to be long and severe. It will be a recession unlike any we’ve previously experienced. Why? Because it’s happening under doctors’ orders. So it deserves a unique name: the coronacession.
It’s taken a few weeks for this to become obvious, mainly because economists don’t know much about epidemiology and it’s taken the nation’s medical experts until now to make clear that their preferred response to the virus will take months to work and involve closing down much of the economy.
We already know that real gross domestic product is likely to contract in the present March quarter and it’s now clear that last week’s $17.6 billion stimulus package is unlikely to fully counteract the fall in economic activity – production and consumption – during the imminent June quarter, brought about by the government’s measures to impose “social distancing” and encourage “self-isolation”.
Since the medical authorities are only now suggesting that these efforts to slow the spread of the virus may need to continue for six months – which, considering their bedside-manner efforts to break it to us gently, may well prove an underestimate – it won’t be surprising if the economy also contracts in September quarter.
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Budget delayed as economy changes too fast to forecast

By Shane Wright
March 20, 2020 — 7.45pm
The federal budget will be delayed until October and the Parliament forced to pass a special appropriation bill next week to ensure the federal government can continue to operate.
In what will be the first delay to the passage of a federal budget outside an election since 1975, the budget that was planned to be handed down on May 12 will be pushed back to October 6.
The government will also lift the debt ceiling from $600 billion to $850 billion in a move it says will ensure "it has the capacity to deal with the ongoing economic impact of the coronavirus".
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Hunger Games: more debt isn’t the answer with restaurants and cafes on the ropes

Australia’s restaurants and cafes have gone from boom to bust, from smashed avocado to smashed. If they are not helped immediately, their tragedy will be Australia’s.
It’s true that the flip side of the sudden stop to eating out and discretionary shopping is that butchers are selling out before lunch and supermarkets are having their best days in history, but their good fortune will not be enough to offset the disasters elsewhere.
On Thursday the Reserve Bank produced its “whatever it takes” moment, to borrow from former ECB president Mario Draghi’s 2012 statement about preserving the euro, except the Aussie version was more laconic.
At least the RBA statement said the money would be “at least” $90bn in 0.25 per cent funding for banks to lend to small and medium-sized businesses, rather than “up to”, as the government’s offer of $25,000 per business said a week ago,
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PM unleashes another $66b, more to come

Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 22, 2020 – 12.01am

Key Statistics

  • $31.9b Cash flow boost for employers and charities of up to $100,000, up from $25,000.
  • $20b Augmented Newstart payments for workers who lose their jobs
  • $40b facility Government-guaranteed loans of up to $250,000 for 3 years for small businesses.
Cash payments for small and medium business have been boosted to $100,000 each, and they will also have access to cheap government guaranteed loans, as part of a $66 billion coronavirus rescue package to be announced on Sunday.
While the $100,000 payments can be used for wage subsidies, workers who have been laid off or stood down will be given fast access to a new welfare wage to tide them over.
Sunday's bailout scheme, the second announced in less than two weeks, will not be the last, as the government has signalled a third package will most likely be needed.
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The coronavirus supply chain shock goes global

Brendan Murray
Mar 20, 2020 – 11.39pm
A "rolling natural disaster."
That's how Ethan Harris, head of global economic research at Bank of America, describes the industrial closures sweeping from Germany to Peru, sparing neither the richest countries nor the poorest, as businesses and consumers hunker down to ride out the COVID-19 pandemic.
Harris, the chief US economist of Lehman Brothers from 2003 to 2008, reckons the shock to supply chains is deeper and more sprawling than the trade wars of the past two years and likely to be more prolonged than the storms, earthquakes or floods that have strained major industries for spells in the past. He expects these factory shutdowns will last into May and possibly longer.
Compounding the supply jolt to companies is a demand plunge in Europe, the US and other major economies. Millions of workers are losing their jobs and the consumers who remain employed have to stay indoors.
Apple is confronting the impact on component makers in Italy, Germany, Malaysia and South Korea after having weathered the February slowdown in Chinese factories that do the final assembly of products like iPhones and AirPods.
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Rollercoaster week for supermarket workers as industry wades into 'uncharted waters'

By Dominic Powell
March 21, 2020 — 12.00am
At 8.15pm on Thursday, the final customer strolls out of a Coles supermarket in Melbourne's inner suburbs, clutching some cereal and a bag of apples. For a brief moment, the only sounds are the hum of the refrigerators, and a Britney Spears song playing quietly on the in-store radio.
Suddenly, it's action stations. A bevy of pallets stream from the back dock, loaded high with pasta, beans, meat, fresh fruit, and an almost biblical procession of loo roll.
Shelves being wiped clean, fights in the isles and sales through the roof. At supermarkets throughout Australia, staff the best, and worst, of Australia.
Staff members quickly get to work cutting open packages and filling the stores' bare shelves with precious goods. It's the first shift for two employees, hired in the last week as supermarkets scramble to deal with increased demand caused by panic buying amid growing fear about the coronavirus pandemic.
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How to fight a COVID slump and protect recovery

In just two months the world economy has been turned upside down. Stockmarkets have collapsed by a third and in many countries factories, airports, offices, schools and shops have been closed to try to contain the virus. Workers are worried about their jobs and investors fear companies will default on their debts.
All this points to one of the sharpest economic contractions in modern times. China’s GDP probably shrank by 10-20 per cent in January and February compared with a year earlier. For as long as the virus rages, similar drops are likely in America and Europe, which could trigger a further downward lurch in Asia.
Massive government intervention is required to ensure that this shock does not spiral into a depression. But scale alone is not good enough — new financial tools need to be deployed, and fast.
Western authorities have already promised huge sums. A crude estimate for America, Germany, Britain, France and Italy, including spending pledges, tax cuts, central-bank cash injections and loan guarantees, amounts to $US7.4 trillion ($12.7 trillion), or 23 per cent of their GDP. Yet central banks are responsible for over four-fifths of that and many governments are doing too little. A huge array of policies is on offer, from holidays on mortgage-payments to bailouts of Paris cafes.
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Coronavirus: Even glass-half-full optimists can do the maths

 “Do the maths.” Whether intentionally or otherwise, in just three words, Deputy Chief Medical ­Officer Paul Kelly highlighted the gravity of the coronavirus in a way no politician has been willing to.
It’s the projected death toll that is most staggering. Indeed, that ­reality, and how profoundly it will impact on the Australian and global societies, is at the heart of the panic that has engulfed the planet.
Make no mistake: we are living through extraordinary times. And as one government MP said to me during the week: “We aren’t even at the end of the beginning yet.”
Doing the maths as to how many among us might fall victim to this virus is truly mind-boggling. We are constantly being told to ­listen to the experts. Hear what the medical professionals have to say. It is those same experts who say that the virus could easily infect between five million and 15 million Australians. Their assessment is that the genie is most likely already out of the bottle, and hopes of containing the virus such that it doesn’t spread so dramatically are wishful thinking.
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Coronavirus: National three-month lockdown ‘the best option’

The head of think tank the Grattan Institute has called for a national lockdown of up to 12 weeks to contain COVID-19, arguing it’s the best option to support society and the economy.
While acknowledging it wouldn’t “be pretty”, John Daley says it is a more plausible response than the current strategies of “flattening the curve” of the epidemic through social distancing, quarantine of those exposed, isolation of the infected and tracking their contacts.
The “end game” to stop then restart national life would build on the federal government’s move to seal Australia’s borders by minimising activity and interactions, Professor Daley said.
He said only essential services such as the food supply chain, power and water utilities and the internet would be kept going.
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Royal Commissions And The Like.

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No entries in this section
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National Budget Issues.

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Australia’s economy will collapse in Q2

The Morrison government's plan to protect the economy and the health of Australians needs to change. The sooner it does the better.
Grant Wilson Contributor
Mar 15, 2020 – 10.57am
Unprecedented decisions await in Canberra this week.
Thus far the Morrison government has presented the coronavirus outbreak in mutually inclusive terms. According to the plan, we can protect the health of Australians, whilst keeping Australians in jobs and Australian businesses in business. Unfortunately, this is not the case.
The plan will need to change. The sooner it does, the better.
There is a grim logic here, that we are reluctant to unpack. But we know, from our vantage, that it will predominate in the months ahead, both in financial markets and in public policy circles.
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Regulators ease coronavirus credit squeeze

Mar 16, 2020 – 9.54am
Financial regulators are extending short-term liquidity funding to banks and are considering easing regulations on lenders to help prevent a credit squeeze hitting cash-strapped small businesses.
As part of its normal daily market operations the Reserve Bank of Australia will lengthen liquidity it offers commercial banks to "six months or longer" in response to global credit market volatility triggered by the coronavirus crisis.
Banks have good long-term funding but have soaked up $18.6 billion of the short-term liquidity in just three trading days, up significantly on the $7.8 billion in the three days before.
The Council of Financial Regulators signalled they may offer regulatory relief to banks to help them continue to lend to customers and not suddenly foreclose on borrowers, such as households and struggling small businesses whose cash flows will be crimped by the coronavirus economic downturn.
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ASIC applies algo brakes to High Frequency Trading

By Julian Bajkowski on Mar 16, 2020 11:37AM

Directs 25 percent trade execution cut amid COVID-19.

You could call it the share market equivalent of Coles and Woolworths imposing purchasing limits to stop a run on toilet paper because of COVID-19 anxiety.
With financial markets oscillating wildly, Australia’s corporate watchdog on Monday moved to check violent swings in high frequency trading on the local equities market from swamping crucial infrastructure, imposing an immediate 25 percent cut in trades executed daily.
The reduction, which hits volumes rather than value, is aimed at easing pressure on post-trade processing that is starting to strain.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) on Monday morning said it had “issued directions under the ASIC Market Integrity Rules to a number of large equity market participants, requiring those participants to limit the number of trades executed each day until further notice.” 
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Media Release Statement by Philip Lowe, Governor

Number 2020-07
Date 16 March 2020
As Australia's financial system adjusts to the coronavirus (COVID-19), financial regulators and the Australian Government are working closely together to help ensure that Australia's financial markets continue to operate effectively and that credit is available to households and businesses. Refer to earlier CFR press release. Australia's financial system is resilient and it is well placed to deal with the effects of the coronavirus. At the same time, trading liquidity has deteriorated in some markets.
In response, the Reserve Bank stands ready to purchase Australian government bonds in the secondary market to support the smooth functioning of that market, which is a key pricing benchmark for the Australian financial system. The Bank will also be conducting one-month and three-month repo operations in its daily market operations until further notice to provide liquidity to Australian financial markets. In addition the Bank will conduct longer term repo operations of six-months maturity or longer at least weekly, as long as market conditions warrant. The Reserve Bank and the AOFM are in close liaison in monitoring market conditions and supporting continued functioning of the market.
The Bank will announce further policy measures to support the Australian economy on Thursday.
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PM to fast-track second wave of stimulus

Phillip Coorey Political Editor
Mar 16, 2020 – 1.25pm
The federal government is working on a second coronavirus stimulus package that could be rolled out within days.
Less than a week after unveiling a $17.6 billion package to try to save business and boost consumption, the crisis has worsened to such an extent that a second round is deemed to be urgent.
It is understood the new economic measures will be more about support than stimulus and will target both business and households.
The Australian Financial Review understands measures being discussed include an extension of some of those announced last week plus some new initiatives.
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Broken bond market forces RBA's hand

When the bond market sends the wrong signals, central banks start to worry.
Jonathan Shapiro Senior Reporter
Mar 16, 2020 – 5.36pm
In the past three weeks we have witnessed market dislocations of biblical proportions.
Regulators, for the most part, as concerned as they are about plunging values, have been prepared to accept them as a re-pricing of risk
But when there are blockages in some of the largest, most liquid, and most important markets in the world, they get really worried.
That is why the Reserve Bank stepped in at midday to announce it would buy government bonds to support the orderly functioning of the market.
Think about that for a moment: Australia's government bond market was broken. The bond market – the risk-free rate that underpins borrowing costs across the economy – was sending the wrong signal.
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Battered bond market sends disturbing signals

Jonathan Shapiro Senior Reporter
Mar 18, 2020 – 2.10pm
Investors are still dumping Australian government bonds even as the Reserve Bank is widely expected to announce plans as soon as tomorrow to conduct quantitative easing, which is supposed to lower bond rates.
The unusual spike in bond yields, given investors usually flock to bonds in times of stress, has been attributed to an aggressive unwind in hedge fund trading positions but the spectre of trillions of dollars of fiscal spending, and the pending supply of necessary issuance, is further unsettling the market.
“Sovereign issuers are trying to borrow large amounts of money in a short period of time to have capacity to pay for the fiscal stimulus, and this comes at a time of sharp volatility in all assets including the risk free government bond curve," said Commonwealth Bank's head of bond strategy, Martin Whetton.
“So the curve has moved quickly to price in the supply.”
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Unemployment of 5.1pc in Feb no comfort now

Australia’s jobless rate dropped to 5.1 per cent in February, from 5.3 per cent in the month before, suggesting the labour market had at least been on a better than expected trajectory heading into the teeth of the coronavirus crisis, which has triggered partial shutdowns of the economy and warnings of mass lay-offs.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics said there was “no notable impact” from bushfires or the pandemic on its February labour force statistics, which are focused on the first half of the month.
A 0.1 percentage point drop in the participation rate to 66 per cent helped drive the drop in the unemployment measure, alongside a solid 26,700 extra jobs, 20,000 of which were part-time.
EY chief economist Jo Masters said the data was “unlikely to provide any comfort to policymakers”.
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Conventional capitalism is dying: Macquarie Wealth

Macquarie Wealth Management, an arm of the beating heart of Australian capitalism, Macquarie Group, has warned that “conventional capitalism is dying” and the world is headed for “something that will be closer to a version of communism”.
In a series of notes sent to investors on Wednesday, Macquarie analysts and researchers said a number of policies announced overnight, including cash payments to US residents, credit guarantees for businesses in Germany, and a Swedish stimulus worth 6 per cent of the Nordic country’s economy to keep banks lending to companies, were a sign that governments were shifting towards “neo-Keynesian” and Modern Monetary Theory policies, including a universal basic income guarantee.
The European Central Bank also announced a €750 billion asset purchase program as President Christine Lagarde said “extraordinary times require extraordinary action” and that there would be “no limits” on the central bank’s commitment to protecting the single-currency union.
Across two notes, titled “A world of no historical parallels –- Making up rules & policies as we go” and ‘Tear at the fabric: Glimpses of the future are here for all to see”, Macquarie Wealth analysts said the shift towards a more fundamental change in the way the economy functioned was evidenced by the way central banks and governments “belatedly recognised” that copying the policy responses of the global financial crises a decade ago were “not going to be enough”.
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Health Issues.

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How to beat the health insurance premium hikes

By John Collett
March 18, 2020 — 12.15am
More than 13 million people with private health insurance cover face an average premium hike of 3 per cent from April 1. Some policy premiums will rise by more than double that amount.
However, there are a few simple steps that you can take to help beat the price increases, or at least minimise their impact.
For example, older people don't need pregnancy cover and a couple who buys their cover as individuals can sometimes pay less than buying cover as a couple.
There are ways to beat the price hikes to health insurance that come into effect from April 1.
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How far should genetic engineering go to allow this couple to have a healthy baby?

Federal Parliament will soon decide whether a controversial IVF procedure called mitochondrial donation should be legalised. But the treatment has been labelled dangerous, and a slippery slope to “designer babies”.
March 20, 2020
One morning in 2005, Shelley Beverley woke up to find that she had gone deaf. She was 21, and living in Johannesburg with her older brother Neil. “I was very scared,” she says. “It was just so sudden.” She struggled through the rest of the day, hoping that her hearing would come back, but it didn’t. In one sense, her hearing loss wasn’t entirely a surprise: Beverley’s grandmother had been deaf, Neil had lost his hearing when he was 13, and her mum, Mary, had lost hers when she was 32. “We knew it ran in the family,” she says, “but I thought I’d been lucky and not inherited it.”
Beverley, 35, lives in Margate, a semi-rural district south of Hobart, with her husband James. The couple migrated to Australia from South Africa in 2010, looking for space, buying 2½ hectares of lush green grass at the foot of a forested ridge near the mouth of the Derwent River. “We love the wildlife here,” says James, looking out the living room window. “We’ve seen pademelons, echidnas, quolls, blue-tongue lizards, even a Tassie devil.” At dusk, hundreds of kangaroos emerge from the forest to gorge on the grass. “It’s very peaceful,” says James. “It’s really helped us after everything that’s happened.”
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International Issues.

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We've seen this story before but this time the Fed is taking on a different beast

Stephen Bartholomeusz
Senior business columnist
March 16, 2020 — 11.55am
We’ve seen this story before. The Federal Reserve Board has cut its policy rate to zero and embarked on a $US700 billion ($1.13 trillion) bond and mortgage-buying program in an attempt to protect the US economy from the economic fallout of the coronavirus. But are they fighting the last war?
In 2008, central banks created the script, slashing interest rates to zero and, in some cases beyond. They embarked on massive quantitative easing programs, hoovering up bonds and mortgages to lower interest rates across their yield curves.
They did it to hold a teetering global financial system together. They were responding to a financial crisis sparked by the meltdown in sub-prime loans. It worked, to a degree.
The financial system didn’t implode, there was a recession rather than a depression and, while most of those unconventional settings have remained in place more than a decade later, financial markets that were under-pinned by those low rates experienced a massive 11-year bull run.
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Fed slashes interest rates to near zero, returns to QE

Jacob Greber United States Correspondent
Updated Mar 16, 2020 – 9.25am, first published at 8.11am
Washington | The US Federal Reserve slashed its key interest rate by 100 basis points and launched a massive $US700 billion ($1.11 trillion) bond-buying program in a dramatic escalation of efforts to prevent an economic meltdown.
As the coronavirus pandemic - and the global economic fallout - intensifies, Fed officials delivered a series of surprise announcements late on Sunday (Monday AEDT) aimed at coinciding with the opening of financial markets in Australia and Asia.
For the second time in less than a week, it cut the target rate, taking it to a range of 0 per cent to 0.25 per cent.
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In a fresh turnaround, Donald Trump swallows his pride for the good of the country

By Matthew Knott
March 18, 2020 — 12.25pm
Washington: Two days in the US capital, two remarkable turnarounds from Donald Trump.
After weeks of downplaying the threat of the coronavirus, the US President finally acknowledged the seriousness of the pandemic on Monday (Tuesday AEDT).
Trump released new guidelines recommending social gatherings be limited to under 10 people and found language commensurate to the moment, describing the virus as a highly contagious "invisible enemy".
A day later he appeared at the White House and abandoned the planned centrepiece of his economic response to the crisis: a payroll tax cut.
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Can Donald Trump lead America through the storm?

For a fleeting moment this week, the US had a commander-in-chief, as Trump took ownership of the decision to shut down the economy to avert a health crisis. But it didn't last.
Jacob Greber United States Correspondent
Mar 21, 2020 – 12.00am
As the eerie process of the world’s biggest economy shutting itself down overnight spreads anxiety and disruption across America, Donald Trump was shaping up to have one of the most impressive weeks of his presidency.
For a few days Trump cast aside his usual instinct for combat, blame shifting and demonisation. In its place stood a commander-in-chief worthy of the title.
On Wednesday (Thursday AEDT) Trump invoked Korean War-era laws that allow the president to sequester private industries in a national emergency. He said he felt like a “wartime president” tackling an invisible foe.
It was an important moment, setting the scene for what lies ahead for younger people struggling to grasp the magnitude of what looms and putting it into a broader historical context that would have resonated with older Americans.
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'Unprecedented': Britain will pay up to 80 per cent of worker wages during coronavirus crisis

By Bevan Shields
March 21, 2020 — 5.38am
London: The British government has launched an historic intervention in the economy by pledging to pay 80 per cent of the wages of workers hit by the fallout from the rapidly worsening coronavirus pandemic.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled the unprecedented scheme while announcing all restaurants, cafes, bars, cinemas and gyms would be forced to close indefinitely from Saturday.
As Europe grapples with the spread of coronavirus, the Queen has fled London in an attempt to avoid contracting the disease.
"For the first time in our history, the government is going to step in and pay people's wages," Johnson said.
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US jobless claims point to massive job losses

Timothy Moore Online editor
Mar 21, 2020 – 10.57am
Weekly jobless claims - workers asking for US government financial help after losing their jobs - are poised to soar this coming week and for several more, economists predict.
Claims in the latest week rose by 70,000 to 281,000 - a 30-month high.
Fundstrat Global's Tom Lee sees claims rising to between 1 million and 3 million "or worse" over the next week.
ING is at 2 million; TD Securities is at 2.5 million; Pantheon Macroeconomics forecasts 2-3 million claims; and, Oxford Economics sees the potential for 4 million or more.
The claims data is a preview of a potential massive drop in nonfarm payroll in April; Pantheon sees the job losses "to be of the order of five million. We never imagined we’d write anything like this.
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I look forward to comments on all this!
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David.

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