Coronavirus repercussions
>> Friday, February 14, 2020
EDITORIAL
Economic repercussions due to government’s decision to ban travels to and from China and its special administrative regions are now pitted against risks of an outbreak.
As of last count, mainland cases of the Wuhan coronavirus has reached 20,438, the death toll at 425 as of Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2020. The Philippines just had its first death on record, incidentally the first known fatality from the infection outside of China. He was the 44-year-old partner of the first identified case of infection.
Airlines have already canceled 306 flights and tourism is suddenly down with the number of Chinese tourist arrivals ranking second to Koreans.
Reports say Cebu Pacific pegs losses to be at P3-4 billion if the crisis drags on for half a year. The Chinese lockdown hollowed out air transport to a void.
While China sluggishly moves economically with its escalating trade war with the United States, it is still the Philippines’ top trading partner, amounting to 18.8 percent of our total foreign trade or $16.43 billion in the first half of 2019. Our exports to China are at $4.62 billion.
The virus scare is unfortunate, second to the Taal episode, which caused the agricultural sector to a staggering loss of P3.06 billion, according to the Dept. of Agriculture.
Government had to herd around 15,000 families or about 66,000 individuals away from the danger zone. It had to build whole new villages for the evacuees.
Yet, despite this, the administration’s economic team thinks all these disruptions will only have “short-term” impact on the economy; visions of a more robust cash flow await toward the end of 2020. Economic leaders, based from reports, still eye a gross domestic product growth of 6.5-7.5 percent.
However, this projection came before the massive cancellation of aircraft movements. While the viral anxiety prevails, trading is on a standstill.
The Dept. of Health had its heavy dose of reality check during the Senate hearing, while the public gets a glimpse of the missing links in matters of contact tracing and quarantine protocols. The agency hereon will have to get down to the nitty-gritty of the multitude of concerns, including allaying public anxiety.
Economic managers, on the other hand, will have to return to the drawing table to see how the economy can pick up to realize its growth targets this year. Economic growth is down with the corona virus and Taal Volcano still spewing its deadly outbursts.
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