December 23, 2024

Patrick Watson of Mauldin Economics argues business as usual is not coming back in the US while coronavirus remains a significant health risk

Patrick Watson #PatrickWatson

By Patrick Watson*

“America will be open for business very soon,” said President Trump on March 23, just a week after local authorities began issuing stay-at-home orders.

At that point, the novel coronavirus had killed a total of 689 Americans. Now, a little over a month later, 689 deaths would be a really good day. And America still isn’t open for business. But the president and some state governors think it should be and are trying to make it so.

Unfortunately, politicians can’t order the economy open again because they didn’t close it. Consumers and businesses began shutting down long before they were forced to, and they won’t re-open just because they legally can.

This is way more complicated than many people think… which means it will take time.

Probably a long time.

Reacting swiftly

The news cycle is moving so fast it’s hard to remember what happened last week, much less last month. So let’s review.

In early March, companies and local officials had already cancelled many conventions and other large events. Then several important things happened on Wednesday, March 11.

  • Actor Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson announced they had tested positive for the virus.
  • The National Basketball Association suspended its season.
  • President Trump, in an Oval Office address to the nation, said risk to most Americans was “very, very low” but also banned travel into the US from much of Europe.
  • The president’s address, combined with the popular, well-known Hanks becoming ill, and the NBA’s drastic action, suddenly made the coronavirus threat seem “real” to millions.

    They reacted swiftly.

  • Disney closed its theme parks on March 12.
  • Colleges told students not to come back from spring break.
  • Churches cancelled services.
  • Restaurants, theaters, and casinos began shutting down.
  • All this happened before the first mandatory stay-at-home orders, which were in California’s Bay Area on March 16.

    The idea that “Big Brother” government closed everything is incorrect. The orders simply codified what was already happening.

    Photo: Pxhere.

    Viral aversion

    The hardest-hit businesses are those that put people in close proximity to unknown others: airlines, restaurants, hotels, retailers, hair and nail salons, etc.

    Your odds of encountering an infected person are much higher in those places. Avoiding them is perfectly rational if you want to avoid the virus. That’s why many businesses closed before being ordered.

    What will bring customers back?

    Well, they need to be convinced that visiting those businesses won’t make them sick. Or, to use economic terms, people must perceive a favorable cost-benefit ratio. The reward has to outweigh the potential harm.

    Survey data says most Americans don’t think we are there yet. Here’s a CBS News nationwide poll conducted April 20-22.

    Photo: CBS News.

    A large majority seem uninterested in venturing out to nonessential places. That probably won’t change until they feel safe.

    Now, there are things businesses can do to reassure customers—extra cleaning, temperature checks, and so on. They help, but they also have a cost. Often, it won’t outweigh the additional revenue it generates.

    So financially, the smartest things many businesses can do is stay closed until they are confident customers will come back and spend freely. 

    Giant quandary

    Restaurants and retailers can’t re-open without workers who must be paid. Presently, many of those workers are furloughed and receiving (or hoping to receive soon) unemployment benefits.

    Those benefits are now extra-generous, thanks to Congress and President Trump. In some states, they are equivalent to a full-time job at $25/hour. That’s more than many laid-off workers were making before (and more than some “essential workers” are making now).

    How, then, is the employer supposed to lure them back? “Come back to work, Joe. You’ll make less money, have to wear a mask all day and might still get the virus and die.” Not very compelling.

    Business owners have to think about liability and reputation, too. What if people get the virus in your restaurant? That’s another unknown and only partially controllable cost.

    It’s a giant chicken-and-egg quandary. Customers can’t go to a business that’s closed, but the businesses have no reason to open unless they think customers will come, and maybe not even then.

    See the problem?

    Government isn’t keeping the economy closed. The people who compose the economy are keeping it closed, by their own free choices.

    No matter what governors say, no matter what the president says, business as usual is not coming back as long as this coronavirus is still a significant health risk. And it will be until we get effective treatments, a proven vaccine, or herd immunity.

    All those are months away, at best. That means economic recovery is also months away, at best, and probably longer.

    It could get even worse.

    Some states are relaxing the lockdowns. I think most businesses will stay closed, but some will re-open. Some customers will visit them, too.

    Two or three weeks later, we may see hospitalizations and deaths jump higher. Then the lockdowns will come back and people will be even more frightened than they are now. The deep recession that was already coming will be even worse.

    We’ll know soon if the risk was worth it.

    *Patrick Watson is senior economic analyst at Mauldin Economics. This article is from a regular Mauldin Economics series called Connecting the Dots.  It first appeared here and is used by interest.co.nz with permission.

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