Intentar ORO - Gratis

The Paradoxes Of Pandemics

Finweek English

|

16 July 2020

As with the varied impact of the 1918 Spanish flu, the long-term consequences of Covid-19 can’t be predetermined.

- Johan Fourie

The Paradoxes Of Pandemics

When a crisis hits, economic historians are in demand. The 2008 financial crisis made students of the Great Depression popular commentators and policy consultants. The swift and correct reaction by the US Federal Reserve was undeniably aided by the fact that its chair at the time, Ben Bernanke, had written his PhD on the 1930s depression and the weak monetary response that exacerbated the crisis.

The current global pandemic is no different. Now the historical analogy, of course, is the 1918 Spanish flu, an influenza pandemic that killed an estimated 6% of (or 300 000) South Africans and as many as 50m people globally. Although far less studied by economic historians than the Great Depression, Covid-19 and its global impact have ensured that the research gap is closing quickly. Several dozen working papers have appeared since March, investigating the economic, demographic and political consequences of the flu.

What have we learned from this new research? In short: the impact of the flu varied. Just as Covid-19 has had very different effects between and within countries – consider Sweden versus Norway or the Western Cape versus KwaZulu-Natal – so too did the Spanish flu of 1918 have very different outcomes, in the short as well as in the long run.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Finweek English

Finweek English

Finweek English

THE HEALTH OF SA'S MEDICAL SCHEMES

As the Covid-19 pandemic abates, finweek takes a look at the financial performance of some of the largest players.

time to read

7 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

The effect of Gilbertson's departure

With Ntsimbintle Holdings now the major shareholder of Jupiter Mines, it could change SA’s manganese industry.

time to read

3 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

Making money from music

Why investors are increasingly drawn to the music industry.

time to read

3 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

Conviction is key

Sandy Rheeder plays a critical role in Mukuru’s mission to open up financial services to the emerging consumer market in Africa through tailor-made technology solutions and platforms.

time to read

5 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

The post-pandemic toolkit

How CFOs can use technology to support growth.

time to read

4 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

Big city living exodus

Mini cities like Waterfall City and Steyn City are redefining city-style apartment living.

time to read

3 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

Big compact, big value

Handsome, with a hefty level of standard specification, the roomy Haval Jolion compact crossover is a great value proposition.

time to read

3 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

On barriers to entry

There are various ways in which a company or sector can achieve competitive dominance. They usually make for good investments.

time to read

2 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

Fear and greed in one index

To buck the trend, when markets are hot or cold, is a tough thing to do. However, it can deliver solid returns.

time to read

3 mins

5 November 2021

Finweek English

Finweek English

Africa's largest data centre facility coming soon

Vantage Data Centers plans to invest over R15bn for its first African data centre facility in Attacq’s Waterfall City.

time to read

3 mins

5 November 2021

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size