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#CylingForPlanetEarth
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SARS Stung the Global Economy. The Coronavirus Is a Greater Menace.
SARS Stung the Global Economy. The Coronavirus Is a Greater Menace.
In the nearly 20 years since SARS, China’s importance in the global economy has grown exponentially.
Apple said on Saturday that it was temporarily closing all its stores in China, including this one in Beijing, because of the coronavirus outbreak.Credit…Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
By Peter S. GoodmanFeb. 3, 2020
389
阅读简体中文版閱讀繁體中文版In 2002, when a lethal, pneumonialike virus known as SARS emerged in China, the country’s factories were mostly churning out low-cost goods like T-shirts and sneakers for customers around the world.
Seventeen years later, another deadly virus is spreading rapidly through the world’s most populous country. But China has evolved into a principal element of the global economy, making the epidemic a substantially more potent threat to fortunes.
International companies that rely on Chinese factories to make their products and depend on Chinese consumers for sales are already warning of costly problems.
Apple, Starbucks and Ikea have temporarily closed stores in China. Shopping malls are deserted, threatening sales of Nike sneakers, Under Armour clothing and McDonald’s hamburgers. Factories making cars for General Motors and Toyota are delaying production as they wait for workers to return from the Lunar New Year holiday, which has been extended by the government to halt the spread of the virus. International airlines, including American, Delta, United, Lufthansa and British Airways, have canceled flights to China.
CORONAVIRUS UPDATES
Read the latest developments in the coronavirus outbreak here.China’s economic growth is expected to slip this year to 5.6 percent, down from 6.1 percent last year, according to a conservative forecast from Oxford Economics that is based on the impact of the virus so far. That would, in turn, reduce global economic growth for the year by 0.2 percent, to an annual rate of 2.3 percent — the slowest pace since the global financial crisis a decade ago.
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Subscribe to The TimesReturning from a long holiday for the first time since the coronavirus’s threat became clear, Chinese investors sent shares in China down about 8 percent on Monday. Stock markets around the world have plunged in recent days as the sense takes hold that a public health crisis could morph into an economic shock.
CUTS TO CRUDE
OPEC scrambles to react to falling oil demand from China.
In a sign of deepening concern, China’s leaders on Sunday outlined plans to inject fresh credit into the economy. That will include a net $22 billion to shore up money markets as well as looser borrowing terms for Chinese companies.
Though China’s factories still produce a mind-bending array of relatively simple, low-value products like clothing and plastic goods, they have long since achieved dominance in more advanced and lucrative pursuits like smartphones, computers and auto parts. The country has evolved into an essential part of the global supply chain, producing components needed by factories from Mexico to Malaysia.
China has also risen into an enormous consumer market, a nation of 1.4 billion people with a growing appetite for electronic gadgets, fashion apparel and trips to Disneyland.
The trade war waged by the Trump administration has prompted a partial decoupling of the United States and China, the two largest economies on earth. Multinational companies that have used factories in China to make their wares have sought to avoid American tariffs by shifting production to other countries — especially Vietnam. The coronavirus might accelerate that trend, at least for a time, should global companies find themselves locked out of China.
The outbreak of the virus in Wuhan, a city that is home to 11 million people, prompted the Chinese government to effectively quarantine the metropolis and much of surrounding Hubei province, barring people from moving around.
Until now, the impact on factories was limited by the fact that the outbreak was unfolding during the Lunar New Year, the most important holiday of the year. Many businesses are closed during the holiday, while hundreds of millions of migrant workers return home to their families in the countryside.
In a bid to keep people home and halt the spread of the virus, the government extended the holiday through Sunday, adding three days. But the fear of the virus is so widespread and intense that many workers are likely to remain away from factory towns this week.
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Some Beijing streets that are ordinarily busy were nearly empty this past weekend.Credit…Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
A frightening epidemic coinciding with a major holiday will almost certainly spell a substantial loss of sales for China’s tourism and hospitality industries. Hotels and restaurants that would normally be full of revelry are empty. Concerts and sporting events have been canceled. IMAX, the large screen film company based in Toronto, has postponed the release of five films it had intended to showcase in China during the holiday.
Even as the holiday officially ends, business is unlikely to return to normal. Many major industrial areas — including Shanghai, Suzhou and Guangdong province — have lengthened the holiday by at least another week, preventing workers from returning.
With flights to China limited and emergency public health restrictions in place, the Chinese operations of multinational companies are likely to be constrained. Major banks, including Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase, are directing that employees who have visited mainland China stay home for two weeks.
General Motors last year sold more cars in China than in the United States. Its Chinese factories will be closed for at least another week at the request of the government. Ford Motor has told managers in China to work from home while its factories remain idled, said a company spokesman.
All of this could play havoc with businesses that depend on China for components, from auto factories in the American Midwest and Mexico to apparel plants in Bangladesh and Turkey.
If customers cannot buy what they need from China, Chinese factories could, in turn, slash orders for imported machinery, components and raw material — computer chips from Taiwan and South Korea, copper from Chile and Canada, factory equipment from Germany and Italy.
“This could potentially disrupt global supply chains,” said Rohini Malkani, an economist at DBRS Morningstar, a global credit rating business. “It’s too early to say how long it is going to last.”
Similar worries accompanied the outbreak of SARS in 2002 and 2003, when the virus emerged in the southern province of Guangdong before spreading across China and around the world, killing nearly 800 people in at least 17 countries.
China had just joined the World Trade Organization, gaining access to markets around the globe. It was harnessing its seemingly limitless supply of low-wage workers to produce cheap consumer goods. Its economy centered on exports. Its consumer market remained in its infancy.
In the years since, China’s annual economic output has multiplied more than eightfold, to nearly $14 trillion from $1.7 trillion, according to the World Bank. Its share of global trade has more than doubled, to 12.8 percent last year from 5.3 percent in 2003, according to Oxford Economics.
Its economic output per person has multiplied to roughly $9,000 last year from about $1,500 in 2003, giving households additional cash for an enormous range of consumer goods.
“China today accounts for about one-third of global economic growth, a larger share of global growth than from the U.S., Europe and Japan combined,” Andy Rothman, an economist at Matthews Asia, an investment fund manager, noted during recent testimony before a congressional panel.
The American semiconductor industry is particularly entrenched in China, which is both a major manufacturing hub and a market for its products. Intel’s customers in China accounted for about $20 billion in revenue in 2019, or 28 percent of its total for the year.
Qualcomm, the dominant maker of chips for mobile phones, is even more dependent on China, drawing 47 percent of its annual revenue — or nearly $12 billion — from sales in the country.
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Security personnel inside a shopping mall in Beijing on Saturday.Credit…Reuters
No one knows how long the coronavirus outbreak will last, how far it will spread, or how many lives it will claim. It is impossible to calculate the extent to which it will disrupt China’s economy. But China’s formidable stature in the world economy means that the impact of the current outbreak is likely to substantially exceed that of SARS.
“The knock-on effects for the global economy are going to be much larger than they were,” said Nicholas R. Lardy, a China expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.
For manufacturers, the timing of the outbreak may limit the damage. They just completed the fourth quarter, when production increases to meet demand for the winter holidays. The end of January is typically slow.
But the effects of the virus on supply chains, which have grown notoriously complex, are difficult to anticipate. A single part of an advanced product like a smart TV may be made of dozens of smaller components, with each of these assembled from other pieces. Companies themselves often do not know the suppliers that are three and four rungs down the chain.
“If you run out of widgets that are essential to production processes and all those widgets come from China, then it may well be that your production lines go to a halt,” said Ben May, global economist at Oxford Economics in London. “These problems are likely to be popping up all over the world.”
This became a problem in the aftermath of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, which devastated manufacturers. Many companies assumed they were buying parts from a diverse range of suppliers, protecting them from shortages, only to realize that critical components were produced by single plants.
If that plays out in China, the consequences are likely to be great.
“We’re talking about a potentially vast swath of a country that the whole world depends on as a manufacturing workshop,” said Susan Helper, an economist at Case Western Reserve University and the former chief economist at the Commerce Department. “The effects will be unexpected.”
Apple assembles most of its products in China. The company has severely restricted travel in China for its employees, its chief executive officer, Timothy D. Cook, said on an earnings call on Tuesday.
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Japan is a popular destination for Chinese tourists during the Lunar New Year holiday, but tour groups have shut down excursions because of the coronavirus threat.Credit…Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images
Apple disclosed much wider volatility in its potential revenues for the current quarter in the face of uncertainties around factory production and sales of its products.
Those uncertainties deepened on Saturday. Apple, which derives about one-sixth of its sales from China, announced that it would close its 42 stores in the country.
Walmart buys vast volumes of its products from Chinese factories while operating 430 stores in the country, including in areas shut down by quarantine. The company has reduced hours at some stores, a Walmart spokeswoman said.
“We may still be in the early stages,” of the coronavirus crisis, Judith McKenna, who runs Walmart’s International business, wrote in an internal memo on Friday.
China is the world’s largest manufacturer of toys. At the International Toy Fair in Nuremberg, Germany, many Chinese suppliers expressed confidence that their factories would soon reopen, said Rick Woldenberg, chief executive of Learning Resources, a family-owned manufacturer of educational products and toys in Illinois.
“But no one’s quite sure how much of this information can be relied upon,” Mr. Woldenberg said.
Because of the trade war, the toy industry was effectively prepared for a moment in which its access to Chinese suppliers was imperiled, Mr. Woldenberg said. In December, when the Trump administration was threatening to impose an additional 15 percent tariff on Chinese imports, many toy companies sped up their orders to beat the deadline. Some shifted production to Thailand and Vietnam to avoid the tariffs altogether.
Toymakers will soon need to rebuild inventory. “If this goes on for four more months, we are talking about a big problem,” said Jim Silver, chief executive of TTPM.com, a consumer research site.
After SARS, China suffered several months of economic contraction and then rebounded dramatically. That might happen this time, too. The only certainty is this: Whatever happens in China will be felt widely.
“Clearly China has become a much more dominant player in the world economy,” said Mr. May of Oxford Economics. “It’s just so much more involved in the global supply chain. Over the last decade, it has been the spender of last resort for the global economy.
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SARS Stung the Global Economy. The Coronavirus Is a Greater Menace.
In 2002, a virus by the name SARS emerged in China at a time when the country was just a low-cost manufacturer of T-shirts and sneakers. Fast forward to today, a virus even more deadly than SARS is spreading like wildfire through the most populous country in the globe. The difference is, China is now a principal element of the global economy, making Coronavirus an even more significant threat to global fortunes. International companies that rely on China for products and those that sell to its market are already experiencing costly problems. Epidemic such as the Coronavirus is not friendly to the economy, especially when one of the most influential countries in the global economy is under attack.
Companies such as Apple, Starbucks, and Ikea have closed their outlets in China as shopping centers are deserted. International airlines have canceled their flights to the country and are expecting huge losses in the coming months. These effects will drop China’s economic growth further down from the 6.1 percent recorded last year, translating to a 0.2 percent slump in the global economy. In economics, this can be explained by the ability of China to provide business for nations across the globe. For instance, the United States ships about 200,000 gallons of oil to China each day, and because of the reduced transport activities, this will impact fuel prices because of the reduced demand resulting in huge losses and diminished business.
Businesses that depend on Chinese companies are bracing for havoc from car manufacturers in America and Mexico to apparel industries in Turkey and Bangladesh. Today the global economy is dependent on one another. The microeconomics of one nation is reliant on another for various exchanges. Retail businesses that require goods from producers, while some industries offering finished goods require markets. So, if Chinese factories cannot get their customers to purchase products, they will, in turn, halt or slash imports of manufacturing components or technology. This is how economics explains the interaction of these economic forces creating a shared response to the contagious epidemic.
Works Cited
Goodman, P. “SARS Stung the Global Economy. The Coronavirus Is a Greater Menace.” The New York Times – Breaking News, World News & Multimedia, 4 Feb. 2020, www.nytimes.com/2020/02/03/business/economy/SARS-coronavirus-economic-impact-china.html.
Small Town, Big Problem The Poverty Rate in Conyers, Georgia
Sarah Soucy
Professor Grey
English 1101
31, October 2018
Small Town, Big Problem: The Poverty Rate in Conyers, Georgia
Most parts of the globe, especially in the United States, are faced by poverty as most of the residents live under the poverty line. Georgia State is not an exemption of the states in the US that are confronted by poverty. Conyers is one of the regions that are under the jurisdictions of Georgia, and this implies that they are also victims of poverty (U.S. Census Bureau). The poverty rate in the Conyers is about 31.6 percent, and out of the total population that is made of 15,394 residents, 4,867 people are reported to survive below the poverty line in the past few years. The poverty rate across the State of Georgia is about 17.8 percent, and this indicates that Conyers experiences a higher than average percentage of the residents that live below the poverty line when the data is compared with that of the rest of the state (U.S. Department of Commerce). With such a trend in poverty levels, the community and the government should develop strategies to decrease the poverty rate in Conyers, Georgia in a way to reduce the levels in the state.
The government has the most substantial role to play in the bid to decrease the rate of poverty within Conyers. Various measures need to be put in place by the government, and such measures include the exploration of ways to increase the median household income (Richie). The government should influence the lawmakers to make laws that are aimed to improve the standards of living of the people of Conyers by increasing the minimum wage. Most of the workers within the Conyers region are underpaid, and this contributes to the high levels of poverty witnessed in the town. The workers are paid lower wages to which make residents unable to keep up with the economic status of the region with the salary only being able to satisfy the basic needs of the family such as food, while other necessities remain to be a luxury. Raising the minimum wage have a direct influence on the rise in the purchasing powers of the residents, and therefore they will be able to afford the cost of living (Hayes). Also with the increased minimum wage for the workers, the residents will have enough money to spend on the basic needs and at some point afford some savings, and this will help the employed individuals cross-over to the other side of the poverty line.
The government can also increase the childcare tax credits to improve the family income, and this can be made possible by increasing the childcare tax credit as well as the earn income tax credit (Greenstein). A rise in the amount of the childcare tax credit would help the families who are already working. The minimum expenses that any of the taxpayers can claim are about 3000 dollars for a single child and up to 6000 dollars for two or more children. Increasing the amount of credit that can be claimed for the children imply that a single child will be able to obtain a considerable amount of money that will assist in their upkeep. Therefore it means that the family income will be raised and the families will be able to cross the poverty line and be able to maintain their family as well as living a better life. Another way that the government can increase the family household income is by increasing the earned income tax credit (The Department of Children and Families). The earned income tax credit is a refundable tax credit for the low to moderate income working individuals and couples especially those with children. Increasing the amount of the earned income tax will help the employed individuals with children, and this will enable the families to save more money and therefore raise their standard of living.
Another way to which the government may use to reduce the poverty levels in Conyers is by tapping into their resources to create more job opportunities (Georgia Institute of Technology). The government can be able to achieve this strategy by enhancing the current subsidized job programs. Through the subsidizing program, the government provides subsidies for the companies that employ people in various sectors especially the manual sector to which most of the people are nearly all skilled. Employing these groups of people imply that a larger workforce will be absorbed and this has the implication of raising the purchasing power for the newly hired employees. The government may increase the tax breaks for the employers as a motivation to employ more people. Besides the provision of subsidies to the employers, the government may create more transitional job programs for the former prisoners and welfare recipients. Through this program, more ex-prisoners will be absorbed into the workforce and therefore be able to make a living for themselves improving their living standards and as well reducing the poverty levels (Casey). The government can also encourage employers to accept the former prisoners into society. The local government can help small businesses by providing free advice to the small business people in assisting them to set up businesses that eventually provide enough income to maintain their families. Besides the provision of free information to the small businesses, the local government can also conduct market research for the products that are set up by the small businesses, and this implies that they will make more sales as they are aware of the market situations and comply with the laws of demand and supply. These strategic moves by the local government may empower the people of Conyers enabling them to live a better life due to high incomes.
The government and the community also assist the people living in poverty as they can help the clothing banks and food pantries through the provision of free advertisement for the donations (Shahin). Most of the people who live below the poverty line find it challenging to purchase foods and clothing. Therefore, the aid by the local government in providing free advertisements for the donations imply that a large population will be able to benefit from the programs and consequently the little money that they earn can be channeled to other beneficial programs such as education of the children while the rest goes to savings. The government can also implement more community service in the judicial system to help non-profit organizations in terms of donations and providing a conducive environment that favors the delivery of their services.
The leaders in the community can do more to help the citizens in their community that are living below the poverty line through setting up donation sites in the local business (Scarborough). The local leaders know much of the community and are aware of the proportion that is hard hit by poverty, and as a measure to reduce more effect, the leaders, therefore, are expected to shortlist the most affected people to be helped first. The community leaders as well can assist in offering for the payroll deduction donations for the local agencies to the people who live under the poverty line.
Poverty reduces the rate of development in a region, and this implies that the areas affected by poverty in Georgia such as Conyers are less developed, and they have less infrastructure than in other states. The infrastructures such as roads, banking services, and electricity are among the most essentials that accelerate the development of a region. The infrastructures are capable of generating new job opportunities for the locals and therefore, for the government to effectively assist the people of Conyers, it has to invest in the infrastructure development increasing the amount of job opportunities and raising the standards of living for the residents of Conyers.
Working Cited
Casey, Sean. Client Services Policy Manual. Georgia Vocational Rehabilitation Agency, July 2018, gvs.georgia.gov/sites/gvs.georgia.gov/files/related_files/document/Policy%20Manual%20July%201%202018%20Protected.docx
Georgia Institute of Technology. Engineering Experiment Station. Industrial Development Division. Economic Profile of Conyers (Rockdale County), Georgia. 1971.
Greenstein, Robert, et al. The US Partnership on Mobility from Poverty, The US Partnership on Mobility from Poverty, 1 June 2018, www.mobilitypartnership.org/improving- child-tax-credit-very-low-income-families.
Hayes, Rosa B. Working, but Poor: A Study of Georgia's Economic Self-Sufficiency Policies. 2006.
Richie, Claire S. Strategies Georgia Can Use to Reduce Rising Poverty. Georgia Budget and policy Institute, 2009, www.workingpoorfamilies.org/pdfs/GA_Aug09.pdf Soucy 2
Scarborough, Kelly. Leadership in High Poverty, High English Language Learner Schools, As Part of Georgia's Vision for Public Education. Georgia State University, 2016
Shahin, Jessica. Child Nutrition Programs: Income Eligibility Guidelines. Federal Register, Vol. 82, No. 67, Department of Agriculture, Monday, April 10, 2017, www.federalregister.gov/agencies/food-and-nutrition-service
The department of Children and Families.” The Commodity Supplemental Food Program.”2018, dfcs.georgia.gov/commodity-supplemental-food-program
U.S. Census Bureau, issuing body. “Income and Poverty in the United States.” Income and Poverty in the United States.2013.
U.S. Department of Commerce. U.S Census Bureau, Quick Facts Conyers Georgia, 2017 www.census.gov/quickfacts/conyerscitygeorgia
