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New studies suggest that Covid-19 was in California in November or December last year. So why didn't we have noticeably more disease and terrible death counts while we did nothing for up to 3 months? They say we had been having a worse flu season than normal, but not that much worse. Doesn't this mean we would be fine doing what Sweden is doing?
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https://komonews.com/news/coronavirus/seattle-researcher-debunks-theory-covid-19-spread-in-calif-in-november Quote:
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Where would NYC's case count be if they had used Sweden's model?
Some areas of the US could have probably done fine with less restrictions. Other areas would have been disastrous. |
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In the short run (months, maybe a couple years) this may have no obvious consequence. The Fed did the same thing in 2009-2018 and inflation didn’t rise nor did the USD fall vs other currencies. That was at a much slower and smaller scale than what the Fed is doing today. But the demand for USD is if anything higher in this crisis. The global financial system runs on USD, the majority of the world’s businesses must pay bills and buy materials in USD, in times of crisis people and companies hoard USD taking trillions of USD out of circulation, so the demand for USD is extreme and the Fed can simply print more with minimal negative consequence. I don’t like this, I don’t think it is healthy or good, but I’m just telling you how it is. In the longer run (more than a couple years), the virus crisis will pass and global business will get up and running in a normal-ish manner. When the demand for USD eases and more of the existing USD goes back into circulation, then I fear printing USD will run into limits. Some think the value of USD will decline, inflation will rise, Treasury bond yields will rise, etc. Others point to the 2009-2018 experience to say that this doesn’t have to happen. I don’t know. Pretty clearly the Fed can print some amount of USD each year without dramatically breaking things, but is that $1TR, $4TR, or what? We are conducting an unplanned, unintended experiment with Modern Monetary Theory. I don’t like MMT, I viscerally think it’s bad and dangerous, I can make arguments why MMT will end badly and previous efforts at MMT ended with currency crises and economic damage but none were by the dominant economic force wielding the dominant global currency, so it is fair to say that arguments pro and con are just arguments and no-one knows. |
I agree the answer is likely unknown. Although I do not believe that the economic damage long term is going to be minimal.
A few thoughts: 1. I don’t think what we’re doing has any comparison to 2008. The numbers are in a completely different stratosphere. And my understanding of 2008 was that was mainly a liquidity crisis, so a big part of the money the FED put out was returned (and relatively quickly). 2. Right, the Fed can print some amount without breaking things. Everyone would agree that $10 would have no impact. Most (but surprisingly not everyone) would agree that printing and giving $1 million to every citizen would break our system. I’d have to think that the numbers we are talking/doing today ($2.5 to $6 trillion, in a system with yearly revenues of $3.8 trillion), has to be more towards the latter than the former. 3. I suppose all of it has to be in the context of existing debt. If we had zero existing debt we could add a bunch and still be better off than we are today. But we’re in a reality where we went from $5 trillion in 2000 to $23 trillion today. That must have an impact. |
Yeah, I have similar concerns.
Normally, if you’re worried about inflation you buy equities and if you’re worried about inflation and interest rates you buy income assets like real estate. But we’re seeing that rents from real estate can simply be cut off with no recourse by the property owner. Lots of small landlords are being driven to the wall by tenants not paying rent due to soaring unemployment. I understand why many tenants can’t pay and why governments won’t let millions be evicted, but the risk of real property just went up. |
If you look here: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
Sweden has significantly higher deaths/1M pop than Germany, Norway, Finland, Denmark and the U.S. Or is that unimportant? |
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Tabs and I have had this running debate over the years where I tend to the camp that it can be worked out as much of the debt is held within US governmental institutions...sort of a giant Grandma's cookie jar...with the proviso that as long as every kid thinks that their cookie is safely in Grandma's jar, then all is well, particularly if grandma is there to administer and control the rate of cookie outflow as well as bake more cookies at a rate high enough to meet demand. The issue is when either someone sees the jar is emptying rapidly yet grandma keeps on promising cookies to the new kids in the family faster than she can bake them and begins to fear that their cookie is purely a figment of grannie's imagination. Then the chips really begin to hit the chipper to badly mix my metaphors. The kids down the block who are also expecting cookies out of the jar (e.g. China, Japan, outside cookie owners) don't dare complain even when they fear the contents of the jar are effectively empty, both as raising the fear will cut off their cookie supply and also, they'll get shot by grandpa at grandma's behest if she doesn't like them. No cookie is worth that. ...and so far, the only reliable supply of cookies is the US fed, they make the best blue chip versions, no one else has and so far everyone who wants stability wants grandma's cookies. If grandma gets replaced by, let's say grandma's insane cousin Grandma Biden or worse yet, Grandma Hitlary, then all bets are off. Either of those two morons will either tell people how many cookies are left....or eat them themselves...or just dump them in front of the kids and call it socialism. ...and that will be the end of cookies for as long as we live kiddo's....and then Tabs will be proven right. Dennis |
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Or is that unimportant? |
It’s important, but it’s not the only important thing.
You wouldn’t want to live in a society where the only important thing was preventing as many deaths as possible. |
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586830644.JPG
Some people really want to see Sweden go really ugly. They have vested themselves in the idea that there is only one way to slow the viral death. ...and that Sweden is doing it WRONG. |
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I am surprised Sweden's death rate per M population is so much higher than neighboring countries with similar cultures. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1586830840.jpg |
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I guess it's a matter of perspective. Obviously the devil is in the details. And time. Time is sort of meaningless when you are dead.
Anyway, I'm surprised Sweden is doing so poorly when "Sweden is Dealing with Covid the Right Way." |
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The key is keeping their hospitals operating efficiently. So far they have managed to do so. |
That shouldn’t be too difficult for a country with 10 million people. I hope it works for them. And it could work (if it does) in the bread belt in the US as long as no one from Kansas goes to the coasts. NYC has 18 million people. Sort of different than Sweden with 10.
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Their folks also trust the government and pretty much do as told. Here, not so much. |
I'm beginning to think that the most important metric is the deaths per confirmed case, not per million population. The longer this plays out, the more important that will become.
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