COVID Pandemic Weakens National Economies as Countries Conti

PostFri May 15, 2020 1:27 pm

VOA - USA


The coronavirus pandemic continues to take a toll on national economies, with Germany among its latest victims.
 
The pandemic pushed the European economic powerhouse into a recession in the first quarter, as its economy shrank by 2.2%.  
 
Germany’s federal statistics agency said Friday the economy’s decline over the last quarter in 2019 was “the worst since the global financial crisis” in 2009.
 
Meanwhile, Portugal’s economy contracted a sharp 3.9% in the first quarter from the previous quarter as the pandemic hit the country’s tourism-dependent sector particularly hard.
 
In Slovenia, the government declared an end to the epidemic Friday and opened its borders, although new cases were still being reported.



Pedestrians walk over a bridge after the Slovenian government called an official end to its coronavirus disease (COVID-19) epidemic, in Ljubljana, Slovenia, May 15, 2020.

The Baltic countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania lifted movement restrictions and established a free movement zone for themselves. Officials in Finland and Poland have indicated they may join the zone in the near future.
 
Despite the easing of restrictions in Europe, Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg said Friday the country will probably maintain travel restrictions until August 20.  
 
Solberg told reporters in Oslo, “We do not wish to maintain these (restrictions) longer than we have to,” but added, “My advice is to plan for the holidays in Norway.”
 
In the United States, the outbreak is taking its toll on the world’s largest economy with retail sales plunging a record 16.4% last month. The drop was steeper than expected as the coronavirus pandemic forced businesses across the country to close.
 
The U.S. is also facing criticism from abroad as it continues to lead the world in the number of infections, with more than 1.4 million cases and nearly 86,400 fatalities.

The Lancet medical journal said in an editorial published Friday that U.S. citizens should vote a leader into the White House who can take a nonpartisan approach to public health issues.
 
“Americans must put a president in the White House come January 2021, who will understand that public health should not be guided by partisan politics,” the editorial said. There was no immediate response from the White House.



FILE - A woman looks at signs at a store closed due to the coronavirus pandemic, in Niles, Illinois, May 13, 2020.

Meanwhile, China’s ambassador to the United Nations in Vienna, Wang Qun, accused the U.S. of eroding the world economy with trade barriers and extending the pandemic by suspending funding to the World Health Organization. President Donald Trump cut funding to the WHO, saying the organization was slow in recognizing the gravity of the pandemic and “pushed China’s misinformation” about the virus.  
 
Trump said his administration would halt funding while conducting a 60- to 90 -day review of the WHO, redirecting the money to other groups and countries.    
 
Separately, a top U.S. public health official Friday said, a COVID-19 vaccine may be available in January or for emergency use later this year. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, acknowledged, however, his projections are “a stretch goal.” COVID-19 is the illness caused by the coronavirus.
 
"I think we will see as soon as July the large-scale trials beginning to get under way for at least one or maybe two of the vaccines that are furthest along. And then others, I'm hoping, come along not too long after that," said Collins.
 
In the Philippines, officials are worried that the coronavirus will have an explosive spread, now that tens of thousands of people are sheltering in evacuation centers on the main island of Luzon. The island’s residents were forced to come out of a COVID lockdown as Typhoon Vongfong pounded the island with heavy rains and winds, wrecking homes, quarantine facilities and schools.
 
Russia began random coronavirus testing Friday. It has the world’s second-highest number of COVID cases, with more than 262,840. 



FILE - Medical face masks and photos of medical workers who died from coronavirus infections contracted while saving others are seen at a makeshift memorial in front of the local health department in St. Petersburg, Russia, May 14, 2020.

Chile's special quarantine for its capital, Santiago, began Friday as authorities attempted to slow the rise in new coronavirus infections after briefly easing lockdown restrictions.  
 
A Rohingya refugee at the massive Cox’s Bazar refugee camp network in Bangladesh has tested positive for COVID-19.  A local resident also tested positive.  Both have been quarantined.  Aid workers have warned that if the virus were introduced into the world’s largest refugee camp, it would likely spread quickly because of unsanitary conditions. Cox’s Bazar is home to nearly 1 million refugees from Myanmar.
 
A new modeling study by the World Health Organization warns that nearly a quarter of a billion people will eventually be infected by the virus and that 150,000 people in Africa could die if urgent action is not taken. The study, published Friday in the journal BMJ Global Health, projects lower infection rates and deaths in other parts of the world such as Europe and the U.S.
 
There were nearly 4.5 million cases and nearly 305,000 deaths worldwide Friday, according to the Johns Hopkins University statistics.  

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