Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Swine flu recession : continue

Previous topic => Swine flu recession

The problem with ignoring the problem of swine flu WHO is that people are probably right. They have relationships with national health agencies in every major country and get a report that the public sees. Which is probably a reasonable estimate of reported cases worldwide per day. Health professionals also know that mild cases probably go unreported and the number of people with the disease is well beyond many of the assessment. Two billion figure seems impossible, but it was probably close to being right. And if He is basing his assessment on the tracks in their databases, how to estimate how many chances to be low as high.

General business and health sectors are clearly not ready for a disease that could infect 100 million Americans. Companies are not going to plan for the 40% of their workers at home or in hospital. The consequences would be too frightening.

Global recession is nearing the end, if the news from the recent gathering of the world's top central bankers and economists is right. GDP growth should begin in the second half of this year, if not in progress in most countries already. Central banks have invested hundreds of billions of dollars in capital markets to save the financial system. Tens of millions of people have lost their jobs in developed countries, and it's hard to put on the number of those who are in jobs in developing countries.

There is a sense of relief in recent weeks that the recession and misery that attends it is not going to be up and become a multi-year depression. The possibility of that happening seems over.

Global enterprises and financial institutions to do everything themselves and could save the world from financial devastation. Now they say that something can not control and have not prepared for the May crush all their efforts, pulling the economy into a place that will be worse than where the world was at the depth of the recent recession.

Financial and commercial sector might be able to fight the pandemic which infects two billion people, if global GDP was robust. The disease can cause a mild recession. It will not work that way. H1N1 influenza may still be a mark on the radar that the amount of May for nothing, but it does not look like that. Tremendous work of bank policy and government May have saved most of the countries of the unexpected and unprecedented disaster. I, on May turn out that another problem, which was equally important, is largely ignored. That would be, and probably will be a tragedy.
by Douglas A. McIntyre

No comments:

Post a Comment