Are we witnessing a “second wave” that’s talked about a lot?In each and every apparition, we are. Recent figures imply that, unfortunately, COVID-19 is back, with revenge, that’s bad news. The good news is that there is no panic as we saw in March and April when the world rushed to close all business and social activities, resulting in unprecedented economic devastation, leaving millions of others at global unemployment.
First, the bad news. In the last 24 hours, the world has recorded one of the numbers of new cases: nearly 310,000 new infections on Friday. Despite the good luck of most countries slowing the epidemic over the more than 3 months, there is a truly extensive resurgence of new instances in Europe, India, South America and the United States.
Some of these countries, such as Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Montenegro and India, recorded higher figures in August and September than at the peak of the pandemic in March and April. In India, for example, there were 97,654 new cases shown on Friday. France, a European hotspot COVID-19 prior to this year, announced on Thursday 9843 new instances, the number it has registered.
In the United Arab Emirates, 931 new instances were announced on Friday, a big leap from the average of 300 to 400 in the last two months. Experts from the United Arab Emirates and around the world say that the accumulation of evidence may be just the Resumption of paintings on site and air travel was followed during the new school year. Therefore, more tests are naturally being carried out than ever before; New instances are later discovered.
However, Dr. Anthony Fauci, a White House adviser and director of the U. S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said he was a member of the U. S. Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. The U. S. , told Americans to prepare Thursday for “a momentary wave” of COVID-19 infections as flu season approaches. I have to cower and cross this fall and this winter because it would possibly not be easy,” he told Harvard Medical School.
And there’s more bad news, economically speaking. A momentary blow is more painful than the first. The first blow comes when they’re standing. When they get the moment, unfortunately, other people are upset to see how to absorb the pain of the former and get up: they are the most vulnerable.
Global economies are looking from the pandemic. The last 3 months have noticed some improvements. Markets recorded a significant increase with the lifting of the containment measure imposed in the past and a “normal” lifestyle began to resume its course. But it wasn’t a full year. Economists say we’ll see a full economy in at least a year. A momentary wave means the global economy will get the next blow by healing its wounds.
What does that mean? It is unlikely that some of the companies that suffered the first wave, due to their ability to deal with the closure with sufficient liquidity, will do so for a moment, as they deserve to run out of money reserves. If things get complicated, more people will lose their jobs, which would have an effect on the broader economic cycle. Governments, mainly in Europe and the United States, seem reluctant to disperse more bailout funds desperately want to help the company. This will restrict the spending capacity of its citizens. The longer the pandemic persists, the worse the recession.
So where’s the good news? There would probably be one, even if it looks like a flicker, not an absolute projector, at the end of the long tunnel.
In his new book, Rage, U. S. journalist Bob Woodward quotes President Donald Trump as deliberately “minimizing” the risk of the coronavirus outbreak in January and February because he did not need to “sow panic” in the United States. “I was looking to minimize it,” Trump told Woodward in an interview recorded in March. “I like to minimize it, because I don’t need to panic. “
Panic is the key word. In the last two to three weeks, as reports of the so-called wave of moments began to appear in the headlines, the medical government’s reaction around global limitation, and that’s a smart thing to do. Institutions and medical staff are expected to revel in the management of new infections. There is a significant minimisation in the mortality rate, which is the maximum vital parameter for governments to take restrictive measures.
Most governments have indicated that the new locks, general or even partial, are out of the question. No one is in a position to follow the painful sting of March and April. Then there are the vaccine trials, which seem to make a lot of progress. temporarily – experts that a COVID-19 vaccine may be available until the end of the year or early next year.
The resilience demonstrated through societies since January and the global economy’s ability to recover quickly, even partially, have also provided valuable lessons globally, a fundamental merit when the virus reappears.
So we’ll be forced to live with the virus in the coming months. And we may see economic setbacks and mess with “specific” and carefully designed containment measures (certainly not in all respects), but this time we will have a decent chance of retaliation We may be fine.
Dear reader,
This segment is about life in the United Arab Emirates and data you cannot live without.
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