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Surge in COVID-19 cases could cause double-dip recession in US: FT

Xinhua | Updated: 2020-07-21 15:31
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People walk in the Financial District as the coronavirus keeps financial markets and businesses mostly closed on May 8, 2020 in New York. [Photo/Agencies]

LONDON - The United States is likely to be hit by a double-dip recession if its national spread of COVID-19 is not brought under control soon, the Financial Times has warned.

Despite the continued rise in COVID-19 cases, fatalities and hospitalisations, US markets remain relaxed because investors are optimistic about trials for vaccines, said an opinion piece written by Gavyn Davies, chairman of Fulcrum Asset Management, and published in the British newspaper on Sunday.

Nevertheless, "even the most favourable outcome in vaccine development would come too late to save the US economy from the spread of the virus over the next three months," the article pointed out.

"Unless public policy can control the rate of infections across the American sunbelt, there could be adverse consequences for any US economic recovery over the rest of this year," it said, adding that experience has shown that delayed lockdowns will result in worse outcomes for cases and fatalities, at least in the short term.

Based on a model which tracks the epidemic on a state-by-state basis, Fulcrum economists forecast that a combined response of full lockdowns, partical lockdowns and no lockdowns to the virus in different US states "would lead to a large drop in activity -- in effect, a double dip -- of about 7 percentage points through the whole economy while the lockdowns last," the article said.

If the situation lasted for three months, it would knock almost 2 percentage points from this year's growth rate, it added.

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