MasterFeeds: April 2020

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Apr 25, 2020

#Coronavirus: Mapping How Much Money Are Governments Injecting into their Countries To Fight Covid19?

Mapping How Much Money Governments Are Injecting into their Countries To Fight Coronavirus
Mapping How Much Money Governments Are Injecting into their Countries To Fight Coronavirus

Just last year, the American economy was performing strong: the Dow Jones hit record highs and the U.S. unemployment hit a record 2.1%. In usual times, it would have been highly unlikely to have seen the country's largest-ever stimulus package just a year later. But, the coronavirus has brought entirely unique circumstances to the world economy, and the U.S., along with other countries, has responded with massive economic programs.

  • The United States has implemented a $2 trillion stimulus package, the largest in the country's history.
  • The European Central Bank will spend over 1 trillion euros on Eurozone bonds over the next nine months.
  • Canada has guaranteed C$2,000 a month to individuals affected by the coronavirus outbreak.
  • Australia has guaranteed struggling businesses A$1,500 every two weeks per employee.

Our coronavirus stimulus data comes from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). We also have compared the stimulus for each country to that country's gross domestic product (GDP) using additional data from the IMF and from the United Kingdom's Office for National Statistics. We have plotted the data in a map for each country with a fiscal stimulus program, drawn to scale for its total stimulus amount. A darker shade of red on the country indicates the stimulus plan represents a larger percentage of GDP. Note that our analysis focuses on G20 countries only.

The Five G20 Countries with the Largest Coronavirus Stimulus Programs

1. United States: $2.3 trillion (11% of GDP)

2. Germany: $189.3 billion (4.9% of GDP)

3. China: $169.7 billion (1.2% of GDP)

4. Canada: $145.4 billion (8.4% of GDP)

5. Australia: $133.5 billion (9.7% of GDP)

In the United States, a relief package was delivered that President Trump claimed as "twice as large" as any prior program. The $2 trillion package includes a one-time cash payment of $1,200 to qualifying Americans. While proponents of a universal basic income program claim the program shows the idea is becoming mainstream, there are significant logistical challenges: those without IRS direct deposit may not receive their check for months.

The U.S. is not the only major economy implementing a direct cash payment: Canada has guaranteed $2,000 every four weeks for up to 16 weeks for all workers affected by the pandemic. The program is part of Canada's C$52 billion ($36.62 billion) program, which was doubled from an initial C$27 billion program.

In Australia, the government will provide wage subsidies of A$1,500 every two weeks per employee. Although summer in Australia, the country reported nearly 6,000 cases by early April, questioning the assumption that warmer weather will kill the virus.

Europe, and particularly Germany, have also passed aggressive economic stimulus programs: the European Central Bank (ECB) will spend over 1 trillion euros on Eurozone bonds over the next nine months. While the ECB has considered a special European coronavirus bond, northern European countries like Germany and the Netherlands fear that this will encourage southern countries like Italy and Spain to spend recklessly.

Was the stimulus plan in your country appropriate? Do you support direct cash payments? Please let us know in the comments and share with your friends.


Apr 17, 2020

#Argentina makes an offer—that most will refuse—to restructure $83bn in #debt

Argentina makes an offer to restructure $83bn in debt | Financial Times

Argentina makes an offer to restructure $83bn in debt

Country asks investors to take a 62% haircut on coupons to stave off ninth default

April 17, 2020

Argentina launched an offer to restructure $83bn of its foreign debt on Thursday as the cash-strapped nation attempts to avoid defaulting on its payments for a ninth time.

Investors were asked to accept a suspension on all debt payments for three years — not long before the end of President Alberto Fernández's term — as well as a 62 per cent "haircut" on interest payments worth almost $38bn.

The government is proposing to pay interest rates of 0.5 per cent from 2023, rising to a maximum of 4.5 per cent, and a 5.4 per cent reduction in the face value of the debt, worth around $3.6bn.

... 

"Today, Argentina can't pay anything . . . [and] not for several years," said Martin Guzmán, Argentina's economy minister, urging Argentines to unite around the government's proposal, which he said was the limit of what it was able to offer, in order to allow the struggling economy to return to growth.

Although Mr Fernández insisted that he would not take advantage of the coronavirus crisis to avoid paying Argentina's debts, one international bondholder described the pandemic as "the perfect excuse" to make a harsh proposal.

...

Investors were quick to denounce the offer as too aggressive, fuelling fears that the country was headed for its latest default. Argentina last failed to make payments on foreign debt in 2014 during the presidency of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who is now vice-president. It would be the country's ninth sovereign debt default since it became independent just over 200 years ago.

Read the full article here: https://www.ft.com/content/3d2f8108-15e5-4877-9ab9-370fa38f18d6



Apr 15, 2020

This is #Europe’s Plan to Get People Back to Work After #Covid19

The European Commission has drawn up initial plans for its member countries to Get People Back to Work and restart their economies.  

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-04-15/here-s-europe-s-plan-to-get-people-back-to-work-after-covid-19

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Apr 9, 2020

The Pain in #Spain Turns to Anger Against Socialists

The astounding failure of PM Sanchez's government to deal with the Coronavirus Pandemic is clear for all to see.

People left to die in nursing homes as employees don't turn up for lack of protective equipment to protect them against infections from Covid-19.


Horror in Spain Turns to Anger Against Prime Minister
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-04-09/spain-s-virus-crisis-gets-political-for-besieged-prime-minister


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Apr 2, 2020

A #Pandemic #Passover Without Family? Not Necessarily

Staff members of the Metropolitan Council's program assisting victims of domestic abuse are seen organizing a Passover food distribution in New York City. Photo: Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty.

Attending a Passover seder was the most commonly practiced form of Jewish observance — 70% of those who were polled said they attended a seder in the previous year. 

A Pandemic Passover Without Family? Not Necessarily

JNS.org – Every year on Passover, Jews ask the same question that is at the heart of the recitation of the Haggadah during the seder: Why is this night different from all other nights? But this year, we'll also be asking ourselves, why is this Passover different from any other we've ever experienced?

The answer is that, sadly, most of us will be celebrating alone or only with those who live with us. The normal experience of gathering with extended families and friends to commemorate the Exodus from Egypt is out of the question. As a result of the spread of the coronavirus, almost all of us are in one form of quarantine or another, practicing social distancing, staying at home or in a complete lockdown, as is the case with Israelis. 

This has set up a conflict between religious authorities about how much leeway to give people to create virtual seders via Internet apps like Zoom. But while this has created an interesting debate, it misses the point about the impact that the pandemic will have on non-Orthodox Jewry, which makes up almost 90% of the Jewish population in the United States.

The Pew Research Center's definitive 2013 study "A Portrait of Jewish Americans" detailed the importance of Passover to a population that is increasingly made of non-affiliated persons it labeled "Jews of no religion." The study found that attending a Passover seder was the most commonly practiced form of Jewish observance — 70% of those who were polled said they attended a seder in the previous year. That compares to 53% who fasted for even part of Yom Kippur, and 23% who attended a religious service once a month or lived in a household where Sabbath candles were lit. Indeed, even 42% of those who said they did not consider their Jewish identity or ties to be a function of religion said they took part in a seder.

As such, Passover seders represent a singular opportunity for Jews to connect with their heritage. Even if some of them are highly abridged and more about a festive family meal than observing the obligation to remember the passage of the Jewish people from slavery to freedom, they perform a vital function. The exercise of taking part in the holiday is a reminder not merely of our past, but of the interconnected nature of Jewish historical memory.

Read the rest of the story here: https://www.algemeiner.com/2020/04/01/a-pandemic-passover-without-family-not-necessarily/

Apr 1, 2020

The prayer meeting that kicked off the biggest cluster of #COVID19 in #France #CoronaVirus

Special Report: Five days of worship that set a virus time bomb in France - Reuters
Five days of worship that set the #CoronaVirus time bomb in #France - Reuters

PARIS (Reuters) - From the stage of an evangelical superchurch, the leader of the gospel choir kicked off an evening of prayer and preaching: "We're going to celebrate the Lord! Are you feeling the joy tonight?"

"Yes!" shouted the hundreds gathered at the Christian Open Door church on Feb. 18. Some of them had traveled thousands of miles to take part in the week-long gathering in Mulhouse, a city of 100,000 on France's borders with Germany and Switzerland...

The prayer meeting kicked off the biggest cluster of COVID-19 in France - one of northern Europe's hardest-hit countries - to date, local government said. Around 2,500 confirmed cases have been linked to it. Worshippers at the church have unwittingly taken the disease caused by the virus home to the West African state of Burkina Faso, to the Mediterranean island of Corsica, to Guyana in Latin America, to Switzerland, to a French nuclear power plant, and into the workshops of one of Europe's biggest automakers.

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