Wall Street
Wins -- Again
Bailouts in the Time of Coronavirus
By Nomi PrinsApril 06, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
To say that these are
unprecedented times would be the understatement of
the century. Even as the United States became the
latest target of Hurricane COVID-19, in “hot spots”
around the globe a continuing frenzy of health
concerns represented yet another drop down the
economic rabbit hole.
Stay-at-home orders have engulfed the planet,
encompassing a
majority of
Americans,
all of India, the
United Kingdom, and
much of Europe. A
second round of cases may be starting to
surface in China.
Meanwhile, small- and medium-sized businesses, not
to speak of giant corporate entities, are already
facing severe financial pain.
I was in New York City on 9/11 and for the weeks
that followed. At first, there was a sense of
overriding panic about the possibility of more
attacks, while the air was still thick with smoke. A
startling number of lives were lost and we all did
feel that we had indeed been changed forever.
Nonetheless, the shock was momentary. Small
businesses, even in the neighborhood of the Twin
Towers, reopened quickly enough while, in the midst
of psychic chaos,
President George W. Bush
urged Americans to continue to fly, shop, and even
go to Disney World.
Think
of the coronavirus, then, as a different kind of
9/11. After all, the airlines are all but grounded,
restaurants and so many other shops closed, Disney
World shut tight, and the death toll is
already well past
that of 9/11 and multiplying fast. The concept of
“social distancing” has become omnipresent, while
hospitals are overwhelmed and medical professionals
stretched thin. Pandemic containment efforts have
put the global economy on hold. This time, we will
be changed forever.
Figures on job cuts and business closures could soon
eclipse those from the aftermath of the financial
collapse of 2008. The U.S. jobless rate could hit
30% in the second quarter of 2020,
according to
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James
Bullard, which would mean that we’re talking
levels of
unemployment not seen since the Great Depression of
the 1930s. Many small companies will be unable to
reopen. Others could default on their debts and
enter bankruptcy.
After
all, about half of all
small businesses in
this country had less than a month’s worth of cash
set aside as the coronavirus hit and they employ
almost half of the
private workforce. In truth, mom-and-pop stores, not
the giant corporate entities, are the engine of the
economy. The restaurant industry alone could lose
7.4 million jobs,
while tourism and retail sectors will experience
significant turmoil for months, if not years, to
come.