Covid-19 Has Reestablished the Power of Europe’s Nat’l Governments – City Journal

He may not have had a pandemic in mind, but Jean Monnet, the late founding father of Euro federalism, saw supranationalist opportunity in fraught times such as these. Europe will be forged in crisis and will be the sum of the solutions adopted for those crises, he said in 1976.

Another architect of the European project, former European Commission President Jacques Delors, painted a gloomier picture recently. In a rare public statement, the 94-year-old Frenchman warned that in the age of coronavirus, the climate that seems to reign among heads of state and government and the lack of European solidarity pose a mortal danger to the European Union.

You dont need to share Delorss federalism to agree with his assessment of the continents response to Covid-19, which is testing European unity to the breaking point. A pandemic is exactly the sort of thing that should necessitate greater European cooperation. Global challenges demand cross-border cooperation; national sovereignty is an anachronism in the age of globalization, mass migration, big tech, and climate change. Or so weve been told. The arrival of a borderless challenge, and perhaps the most acute crisis that the European Union has ever faced, has exposed the hollowness of these views.

Far from demonstrating the merits of pooled sovereignty, Covid-19 has so far reestablished the power of Europes national governments. Borders have gone up across the bloc, and the continents response to the virus is defined by variety, rather than unity. Sweden opted for a lax approach; Emmanuel Macron deployed the Napoleonic resources of Frances administrative state; Hungarys authoritarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbn exploited the pandemic for an outrageous constitutional power grab; and Germany tested its way into a position of comparative strength. In cases where national responses resemble one another, its because policymakers happened to alight on the same set of measures, not because of any sort of cooperation. Britains newfound freedom has proved neither an advantage nor a disadvantage in relation to Covid-19.

The level of frustration at the lack of a coordinated European response was underscored yesterday, when Mauro Ferrari resigned as president of the European Research Council. The EUs top scientist said that he was extremely disappointed by the European response to the coronavirus. I arrived at the ERC a fervent supporter of the EU, he told the Financial Times, but the Covid-19 crisis completely changed my views, though the ideals of international collaboration I continue to support with enthusiasm.

If you want to know how much solidarity is on offer from Brussels, ask the Italians. Nowhere is frustration with the EU more keenly felt than in the Wests first coronavirus hotspot. In late February, the Italian government requested assistance from other EU member states. When the EU commission activated the Civil Protection Mechanism, the formal means by which such assistance is sought, Italys neighbors failed to heed the call. More support has been forthcoming only in recent weeks, with member states lifting bans on medical-supply exports. Nonetheless, to most Italians, Covid-19 makes a hat-trick of recent crises that have exposed the sizable gap between rhetoric and reality on EU cooperation. First a debt crisis, then a migrant crisis, now a public-health crisis. According to a recent poll, 72 percent of Italians believe that the EU hasnt contributed in any way to the fight against Covid-19. Before the coronavirus crisis hit, Italian trust in the EU stood at 34 percent. Now the figure sits at just 25 percent.

Beyond concrete policy responses, the crisis has also exposed the emptiness of the shared European identity that Brussels sought to forge over the years with a flag, an anthem, citizenship, and other gimmicks. During these trying times, Europeans have turned not to Brussels but to national leaders, including the continents remaining monarchs. To some, this is just evidence of how much work remains. You can hear the echoes of Monnet in the prominent federalist Belgian MEP Guy Verhofstadt as he describes the opportunity he sees in the crisis: We should use this crisis to forge a more united and stronger Europe. Were starting this struggle from an economically and structurally disadvantaged position. If were to overcome this storm together, it has to be as one unionnot 27 individual countries.

The best hope of Covid-19 moving the EU toward an ever closer Union is on the economic front, where calls for so-called coronabondsissued by a European institution, backed by all member states, and used to fund spending on an individual member-state levelhave some momentum. Even here, though, resistance is considerable. The divide between the continents needy south and frugal northexposed during the last economic crisisappears unchanged. A coordinated European economic response, with or without coronabonds, is yet to materialize. Advocates of coronabonds argue that this time is different, not least because the coronavirus is essentially an Act of God, not a consequence of member-states past mistakes. Indeed, German newspapers that stoutly opposed generosity toward insolvent Mediterranean states a decade ago are more sympathetic today. For the time being, however, European governments are in a stalemate.

In addition to persuading member states to deliver on economic solidarity, the federalists also need to demonstrate the EUs worth as a guarantor of liberal democracy. Now that Orbn has used the coronavirus to award himself the power to rule by decree indefinitely, we will soon discover how effective the EU is at preserving the freedoms that it claims to hold dear. The mechanisms in place to do so are about to be tested like never before.

Its dangerous to see the coronavirus as the complete vindication or repudiation of any particular worldview. The pandemic has exposed weaknesses and strengths in all sorts of approaches to government. For all the EUs failures to rise to the Covid-19 challenge, it may yet prove to be the sort of crisis that Monnet predicted, from which a new, more centralized Europe emerges. But Europes federalists face two entangled uncertainties. The first is whether they can exploit Covid-19 to pool sovereignty more deeply in Brussels. The second is whether that new Europe is something that would command the support of the continents people.

Oliver Wiseman is the U.S. editor of The Critic.

Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images

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Covid-19 Has Reestablished the Power of Europe's Nat'l Governments - City Journal

Jharkhand CM Soren cites a crisis to underscore strength of federalism in India – Hindustan Times

Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren on Wednesday cited a silver lining in the countrys efforts to battle the unprecedented crisis presented by the coronavirus outbreak while acknowledging that the decision on lifting of the nationwide lockdown after its completion on April 14 was not an easy decision to make.

Soren lauded the strength of federalism displayed by the cooperation among different states especially in dealing with the migrant crisis engendered by the announcement of 21-day national lockdown.

Hundreds of thousands of migrant workers were left without work or money after businesses in the unorganised sector, including construction, were ordered to shut shop temporarily in line with the lockdown provisions that came into effect on March 25.

Several of these migrants started a long march home on foot and had to be accommodated into temporary relief camps set up by different states to provide them food, shelter, sanitation and medical care.

The chief ministers of different states coordinated on the issue of migrants to ensure they were not left unattended. Soren referred to this while talking about the strength of federalism.

Strength of federalism has come to the fore in fight against Covid-19 pandemic, PTI quoted Soren as saying. He added that chief ministers were coordinating with each other to help out people stranded outside their home state.

Jharkhand, one of the last Indian states to report a positive case of coronavirus infection, is home to several of these migrants who were left stranded in different states including Maharashtra, Delhi, West Bengal, Karnataka and Telangana.

Most states set up facilities to ensure that none of the workers went hungry and they also offered cash relief to the daily wagers registered in their respective states. The Central government, too, announced several measures including cash transfers to additional free ration under the food security scheme to safeguard the poor from loss of income during the current crisis.

Sorens endorsement of cooperative federalism comes at a time when the Centre and the states have held several rounds of consultations and mostly worked in tandem to enforcement measures to contain the outbreak of the pandemic.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, too, lauded the work done by states while states that they were working in close coordination with the Centre.

PM Modi is set to have another meeting with chief ministers of states on Saturday, March 11, when a decision on the extension of lockdown could be taken.

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Jharkhand CM Soren cites a crisis to underscore strength of federalism in India - Hindustan Times

The way Greece has conducted itself in this pandemic is an example to us all – The Spectator USA

Aristophanes was a comic genius long before the Marx Brothers, but he also gave good advice to the Athenians: stop the war! In his playLysistratahe had the women going on strike no more nookie until the men stopped fighting. During the plague that killed the greatest Athenian of them all, Pericles, Aristophanes advised the young to isolate, meditate and masturbate, advice still valid to this day.

Greece, with roughly the same population as Switzerland and faced with a surge of migrants turned loose by the dreaded Turks, has handled the crisis well. The American media is using the virus crisis in order to attack Trump, but the Greek people will not tolerate such craven opportunism and dishonesty. Criticism of the government is almost non-existent, as the suddenly wise populace is united against the unseen menace. God knows poor Greece has had enough thunderbolts aimed at her, starting ten years ago with the eurozones incompatible economic demands. I remember well writing an article pleading with the then prime minister, an arrogant Euro ass-licker by the name of Samaras, to return to a devalued drachma and not to sacrifice the savings and welfare of millions in order to have motorcycle escorts when entering Brussels. Like all craven cowards, he chose the motorcycles.

Recently Louis de Bernires wrote something in theTelegraphabout my birthplace that touched me. He ran into Lord Owen and the former foreign secretary told him that he had become a Leaver because of what had been done to Greece. (David Owen has a summer house in the Peloponnese.) The country that was reduced to penury by Brussels was the only one that stood beside Britain in 1940 and managed to humiliate Mussolinis troops and drive them back into Albania. While this was going on, Belgium, Holland and France had obliged the Wehrmacht and folded like a cheap accordion. Not us Greeks; my mother had five brothers (all Spartans) at the front during the first week of the war. What made Metaxas and King George and all the Greeks defy the Axis powers? (The Italians had only asked for free access to the Middle East.) After all, they had nothing to gain, and the combined Axis forces meant certain defeat. I suppose it was pride in our heroic past, and battles like Thermopylae and Marathon, that fired up the nation.

Sure, the Greeks enjoyed a free ride with EU moolah for quite a while, but we were never ready to be admitted in the first place, so why the severe punishment? Is it because we did the right thing back in 1940? Is it because we did the right thing again in 1947, when we defeated the Stalin-backed reds? Or is it because we forgave the Germans, following reparations and a decent interval, after the war? No to all three; it was because we were easy to bully and were led by midgets. Now the chickens have come home to roost, as they say in Alabama.

The reports coming out of Greece nowadays are always about the migrant crisis, one caused by the neocons in Washington and the mission accomplished victory of that halfwit George W. Bush, aided and abetted by honest Tony Blair. Now fake news of violent local reactions to the wave of migrants command foreign coverage. The crisis began five years ago and continues unabated. It has wrung every drop of generosity from a people that pride themselves on their compassion. It has led to concentration camp-like conditions on some beautiful islands and in some parts of Athens. And all this time no one from Brussels dares say a word to the Turks, or to the Americans, who are, after all, the ones responsible for a war that began in 2003 and continues to fester to this day.

There is no resolution in sight to the overflow of migrants and the possible breakout of the virus in the overcrowded camps. Turkey has become the official trafficker of migrants, while the sultans in Brussels dither and meet and dither some more and schedule more meetings. Hamlet would have fit right in with this bunch. In the meantime the public has become outraged at the lack of action on the part of those responsible. Some are even blaming international aid workers for guiding the migrants towards the islands, although there is no proof of this. I wouldnt put it past them. They did it to the Italians, so why not to the Hellenes?

Never mind. Everyone seems to have turned Turkish of late. Gotcha journalism reigns supreme in the land of the depraved, where a virus that came from bats served as a delicacy in a disgusting Chinese food market is now used as an excuse by the media to discredit Donald Trump. In the Bagel virus sufferers in overflowing hospitals have spit and cursed and threatened nurses, a news item that somehow escaped the notice of theNew York Times.

One thing is for sure: once this plague is over, national barriers might make a comeback and be seen as more than just an impediment to human freedom. A borderless world may be the dream of rich subversives such as the ghastly George Soros, but something good always emerges after a catastrophe: like never trusting the Chinese and outlawing the word globalist.

This article was originally published inThe Spectators UK magazine.Subscribe to the US edition here.

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The way Greece has conducted itself in this pandemic is an example to us all - The Spectator USA

Coronavirus Pushes Biggest Migration in the Americas Underground – OZY

When Colombian President Ivn Duques government closed the countrys border with Venezuela on March 14, its move was aimed at reducing the risk of the coronavirus spreading into the nation from its troubled neighbor. Two weeks later, that decision appears to have spawned a different consequence merely making it even more dangerous and exploitative for Venezuelan migrants seeking to escape their country.

Desperate to flee or at least access Colombias health services and food supplies, Venezuelan migrants are now paying illegal armed groups for passage through dangerous informal border crossings. Known locally as trochas, these crossings are spread along the 1,379-mile border between Colombia and Venezuela.

Since 2016, Venezuelans have crossed into Colombia to escape their crippled economy, which left their public health service in ruin and created shortages of food and basic medical supplies. Today, 1.7 million Venezuelan migrants and refugees reside in Colombia.Most of them came legally, with Colombia keeping its borders open longer than most Latin American nations even as the migration became a flood last year.

There are thousands entering through the trochas on a daily basis, and thats not going to be stopped easily.

Eduardo Espinel, Venezuelans in Cucuta Foundation

But since the border closure OZY was the first to report on the increasing likelihood of that move a growing body of evidence suggests Venezuelan migrants trying to leave their country are using trochas to get into Colombia. On one occasion, 60 riot police were sent to an area near Cucuta, a Colombian border town, after an instance of illegal migration. Experts and observers say thousands of Venezuelans might be crossing over every day. And other reports suggest migrants are now paying up to 100,000 pesos ($25 U.S.) to cross the trochas and around 25,000 pesos ($6 U.S.) for guides to help them reach the other side. In effect, the border closure has merely pushed what is the largest migrant crisis in the Americas Venezuelans leaving their nation underground, potentially making it even harder to manage.

Its impossible that the [Colombian] authorities can control all the people that are leaving, says Eduardo Espinel, director of the Venezuelans in Cucuta Foundation. Although the border is closed, there are thousands entering through the trochas on a daily basis, and thats not going to be stopped easily.

Some Venezuelans are leaving their country out of fear others to buy food or for medical appointments for diseases like diabetes, cancer and HIV, with treatment facilities scant in Venezuela.

In the past, Venezuela has closed its border with Colombia, but those instances were during political disputes never during a crisis of the scale of the coronavirus pandemic. Border closures on those occasions werent enforced very strictly, say experts. On this occasion, the Colombian government is generally trying to make an effort through the armed forces to enforce the border closure, says Marianne Menjivar, Colombia and Venezuela country director for the International Rescue Committee. The nature of what were facing now is different.

But while the number of people crossing over has reduced, they seem to be getting through, Menjivar adds. And crossing through the trochas presents high risks for vulnerable migrants.

Forstarters, they have to pay. Women are at high risk of rape, she says. Somecross wading through rivers, holding onto ropes. If it rains, the rivers grow,making these crossings even more dangerous.

Oxford University researcher Dr. Julia Zulver, who has worked extensively on the border areas in Colombia, shares Menjivars concerns. What we know about these [trochas] is that they have a strong presence of armed actors who, when it comes to women and girls, often engage in sexual violence, Zulver says. These are dangerous and precarious places for people to be.

Eira Gonzalez, a journalist on the Venezuelan side of the arid La Guajira region in Northern Colombia, says she has seen thousands of Venezuelans with children in their arms asking what are we going to do? in Paraguachon, the main border town in La Guajira, after the border closure. Gonzalez used the trochas herself for her work.

For the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) think tank, the decision to close the border was inhumane.

It may be justified, but its undoable, says Gimena Snchez-Garzoli, WOLAs Andes director. They should treat vulnerable Venezuelans humanely and with special attention given the public health crisis [in Venezuela].

But Felipe Muoz, thegovernments border manager, tells OZY the decision was not taken lightly andthat it is not for xenophobic reasons but for other sanitary and public healthreasons.

There is nothing against any nationality, because 44 percent of the people who cross the border are Colombian, Muoz says. He acknowledges the border closure is clearly not a perfect measure but adds that the move was made after consultations with the Pan American Health Organization that helped them correspond with the Venezuelan government.The two governments broke diplomatic ties last year.

Indeed, Colombia is battling its own, fast-expanding coronavirus crisis. The country had 798 confirmed cases as of Tuesday. Colombia has now barred entry to all travelers from abroad. All public events have been canceled, and schools, bars and nightclubs have been closed. In a state of emergency announcement last week, an obligatory isolation was ordered for the elderly the most susceptible to the virus to stay at home until May 31.And last Thursday, Duque announced a mandatory quarantine (with people allowed to leave houses only to buy essentials like food and medicines) until April 13. Fourteen people have died so far from the virus in Colombia.

But the illegal entry of Venezuelan migrants through the trochas could further complicate Colombias own challenges too. And it wont be easy to manage, say experts. The working relationship that health authorities between the two countries are about to develop is marred in mistrust on both sides, says Sergio Guzmn, director of Colombia Risk Analysis. Neither Venezuelan health authorities nor its political leaders have credibility with their Colombian counterparts, which is likely to stem the flow of information at a critical time.

And things could get worse, he warns. For now, Venezuela has reported only 135 cases. But as the disease outbreak gets worse in that country, its broken health care system could turn what began as a trickle at the illegal border crossings into a flood, he suggests.

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Coronavirus Pushes Biggest Migration in the Americas Underground - OZY

Germany agrees to take in 50 young migrants from Greek islands – Daily Maverick

epa08268824 Asylum seekers, who have disembarked in the last four days on Lesvos Island, wait in line in a guarded spot of the port of Mytilene, to receive food, Lesvos island, Greece, 04 March 2020. The newly arrived asylum seekers will be transported not to the refugee camp of Moria but to a closed type refugee camp in mainland Greece. EPA-EFE/ORESTIS PANAGIOTOU

The move was a first step by Germany, officials said, as worries mount about the health situation in the Greek camps due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Tens of thousands of migrants tried to get into European Union member Greece after Turkey said in February it would no longer prevent them from doing so, as agreed in a 2016 deal with the EU in return for aid for Syrian refugees.

Greece has described conditions in the camps on some of its islands, where more than 40,000 asylum seekers are now stuck during the coronavirus crisis, as a ticking health bomb.

Germanys interior ministry said on Tuesday it aimed to begin the transfer of unaccompanied minors next week from Greece, which has been the main gateway into the EU for people fleeing conflict in the Middle East and beyond.

On arrival in Germany, the young people will be placed in quarantine for two weeks before they are divided up across Germany, the ministry said, adding that other EU states had agreed to similar measures.

While the rush to the border in March met a strong response from Greek security forces, tensions have largely settled since the outbreak of the new coronavirus prompted Turkey to close its borders with Greece and Bulgaria.

Greece is urging the EU to help during the coronavirus crisis and has said it is ready to protect its islands, where no cases have so far been recorded.

Athens quarantined a migrant camp on the mainland after 23 asylum seekers tested positive for the coronavirus. (Reporting by Madeline Chambers and Holger Hansen; Editing by Alexander Smith)

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Germany agrees to take in 50 young migrants from Greek islands - Daily Maverick

What About Migrants And Refugees? The Stark Reality Faced By The Worlds Displaced During Covid-19 – Green Queen Media

As Covid-19 continues its spread across the world, the pandemic will disproportionately affect the worlds most vulnerable populations, among them asylum seekers, refugees, internally displaced peoples and migrant workers. The world must turn its attention to respond to this global crisis in a way that recognises the acute challenges these communities face.

The entire world is gripped by the current coronavirus pandemic. From Lombardy to New York and Wuhan to Bogota, all global resources- from governments, businesses and individuals- are being redirected to fight the spread of Covid-19. Even healthcare systems in developed economies are under immense strain, overwhelmed almost to their breaking point with hundreds of thousands of patients needing emergency care and rising deaths.

For many of us, the experience of this pandemic is like none other half of the world is on lockdown, those of us who can are working from home and we have perhaps never been as worried about health and safety before. But for the vulnerable sections of global society refugees, asylum seekers, migrant workers, displaced peoples and low-income earners the gripping concerns about life or death are an everyday reality that Covid-19 has only intensified.

For these groups, the pandemic will undoubtedly make their lives even more challenging than they were before, exacerbating almost every threat they already face in terms of access to healthcare, sanitation, food, income, shelter and education. In East Asia alone, the recession will keep at least 24 million living on US$5.50 per day. The pandemic isnt just a global health crisis it is a humanitarian emergency for millions of people around the world.

This including people right here on our doorstep in Hong Kong. Already one of the most unequal cities in the world, marginalised groups in Hong Kong have for months been facing additional difficulties resulting from the economic downturn, from pay cuts to loss of employment altogether all of which will only work to deepen existing social inequalities and trap poverty-stricken groups.

In the immediate term, many people from marginalised groups struggle to afford personal protective equipment, like masks and hand sanitiser. This is an unforeseen expense that they now have to assume, with little wiggle room in their budgets, explains Victoria Wisniewski Otero, Founder & CEO of Resolve Foundation, a Hong Kong-based charity. Low-income or on-call gig workers, many of whom are unable to work from home, are forced to sacrifice their health if they cannot afford resources to protect them from the virus.

And while many of us have the privilege of social distancing in our homes, for Hong Kongs poorer members of society, their housing is cramped and uncomfortable, if they even have a roof over their head at all, Otero adds.

Hong Kong is also home to a huge migrant worker population, with migrant domestic workers alone representing close to 10% of the citys total working population. While policies put in place to curb the spread of the virus are crucial to help flatten the curve of Covid-19, many of them, such as social distancing and bans on large gatherings may put their labour rights in jeopardy. For asylum seekers in the city, they face the additional threat of lacking access to any medical care at all.

While the Hong Kong government has launched initiatives to help boost the economy and alleviate some of the social impacts of the pandemic, almost all of the funds that have been put forthhave restrictions that limit access by minority communities, especially people like domestic workers or asylum seekers with visa restrictions, said David Bishop, co-founder of nonprofit Migrasia and Principal Lecturer at the University of Hong Kong.

In India, the second most populous country in the world, 1.3 billion people are officially on lockdown, the biggest quarantine effort implemented by any government. The Indian economy itself is made up of local communities that power its marketplaces, farms and warehouses, the backbone of which is a massive informal sector that makes up 80% of the countrys non-agricultural employment, including migrant labourers who rely on daily wages.

Not only have 92% of the migrant day labourers already lost their incomes as a result of the economic fallout from the pandemic, they were given only 24 hours to return to their homes in time for the full country lockdown curfew. This was basically impossible for most of them, given that a vast majority come from far-away villages and given that transportation routes were cut off anyway. For many, it is a life-or-death journey on foot, a risky gamble that can mean facing police beatings, starvation and dehydration. At least 20 migrant workers have already died as they make their way home, hundreds of kilometres away.

Similar hardships are felt by the majority of the 7 million migrant labourers across Southeast Asia. Wealthy expatriates can choose whether they stay in their place, or to go, and often if they are passport holders of advanced economies, governments may even help them fly home. But faced with no wages, industrial workers, domestic servants and garment labourers have to choose between sleeping where they work in cramped conditions, without access to clean water, potentially running out of food rations or to attempt to make the journey home, where upon their arrival they will be faced with similar overcrowded conditions, the perfect hotbed for the spreading of the pandemic.

Then there are the hidden victims refugees and displaced people. In a recent statement, Henrietta Fore, the chief of UNICEF, said that there are 31 million children who are torn away from their homes, 17 million of which are internally displaced, 12.7 million are refugees and 1.1 million are asylum seekers. Most of them cannot call a doctor if they become sick, cannot wash their hands whenever they need to, and physical distancing is simply impossible in the swarming camps where they currently reside.

Many camps are already in a race against a ticking time-bomb. In Malakasa and Ritsona, two of 30 refugee facilities in Greece, several cases of people displaying symptoms of the virus have been detected. If left uncontained, a full-blown outbreak in camps would send the human cost of the pandemic further into unchartered territory.

Many of these individuals are separated from their families and away from their country of origin, their physical and emotional needs must not be forgotten, said Archana Kotecha, the Asia Region Director and Head of Legal at Liberty Shared, an anti-trafficking NGO.

Aside from the devastating loss of lives, the human impact of this pandemic on vulnerable migrants, refugees and the undocumented is likely to be a heightened risk of exploitation. Poor access to already strained healthcare services and no access to social welfare causes a crystallisation of vulnerabilities driven by the need to survive in exceptionally difficult times, explains Kotecha.

Recently, the United Nations launched a major humanitarian fund worth US$2 billion to lead a global response plan to some of the worlds most vulnerable countries. The appeal seeks to protect millions of people around the world who are most at risk of the coronavirus itself, and the consequential impacts of efforts to contain the pandemic.

The fund will help kickstart global governmental efforts to respond to the acute challenges that vulnerable groups face. But this is only the beginning, and all of us have a responsibility to step in to do what we can.

Otero believes that those of us who have the privilege to remain at home without huge financial strains should do their part. There are existing drives by civil society groups to organise distribution campaigns and initiatives to support the homeless. Now is the time to pledge your support. Become a monthly giver to NGOs, giving them a stable source of income. During so much uncertainty, this sends a great message, she said, adding that when the wellbeing of vulnerable groups is safeguarded, we all benefit collectively as a society.

The world is undoubtedly shaken by the pandemic, but some are and will continue to bear a much heavier burden as the crisis continues. For those of us on the fortunate side of the world, we must acknowledge our unique responsibility to give and support others in any way we can right now. Historys judgement will not be kind should we foresake compassion and aid for the voiceless amongst us during this unprecedented global crisis.

Lead image courtesy of Rajesh Kumar Singh / AP.

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What About Migrants And Refugees? The Stark Reality Faced By The Worlds Displaced During Covid-19 - Green Queen Media

After the pandemic: whither capitalism? – Spiked

One of the catchphrases of the pandemic so far is that crises change everything. For instance, Sarah Lunnan, a spokesperson for Extinction Rebellion, remarked that everything now has changed. The Conservatives have just nationalised the economy. What we do now is very interesting. That last phrase sounds ominous to me, and Ill return to that at the end of this article.

Of course, lots will change because of the precipitous economic disruption of the shutdown. Thousands of smaller businesses are already going under and may not return, and this could rise to hundreds of thousands unless the government acts immediately to deliver on its business-support pledges. If the government fails to support businesses and workers, in the same way it has been failing with virus testing and health workers protective equipment, millions of individuals and families will endure great hardship. Many may not get their old jobs back. Over the medium term, this can be a bad or a good change, depending on the quantity and especially the quality of new post-recession job opportunities.

However, despite the changes brought about by the economic dislocations, at this stage it is likely that much economic policymaking from the past will endure. This is because crises tend to change things only to the extent to which they draw extant socio-economic features to the surface and speed up pre-existing trends.

An example from economic policy: the 2007-09 financial crisis is said to have led to the subsequent adoption of ultra-easy monetary policies quantitative easing and zero or negative official interest rates. But these measures were not qualitatively new. The secular trend of looser monetary policy originated in the 1980s, especially after the 1987 stock market crash. Since then, real official interest rates have been on a downward orientation. Even quantitative easing was not an innovation of the Western financial crash. It began at the start of the millennium in Japan, and everywhere had its roots in conventional open market operations, where central banks had traditionally bought and sold securities in the financial markets.

When it comes to Johnsonomics, too the economic policies of prime minister Boris Johnsons government the signs today suggest there will be much continuity after the pandemic is contained. Crises rarely erase the past completely, and that goes for economic policy trends. Things might change in six months time after the unpredictable impact of an even more extended lockdown. But on current projections, this crisis looks like extending existing practices and crystallising previous tendencies in economic policymaking.

This continuity overlays the different characterisations we already have about Johnsonomics. Because of the pandemic we have three so far: BC, DC, and AC before, during and after the coronavirus crisis. The BC depiction was about delivering on Johnsons levelling up mantra mainly, it seemed, through focusing economic policy on the regions outside London and the South East, especially infrastructure spending on transport and communications, and spreading out research-and-development operations.

The DC version is that this has all been overtaken. Policy has shifted to a different mode: doing whatever it takes to ensure as much of business and employment survives the lockdown recession. Although there is huge, warranted concern about the speed and the comprehensiveness of implementing chancellor Rishi Sunaks packages of financial support, there remains broad agreement that the intention of these policies is entirely justified: to preserve as much as possible of business structures and peoples incomes, so that after the crisis passes the economy is better placed to resume its activities.

Which brings us to the third phase, and what is likely to materialise in policy AC after the pandemic. To what extent will the responses to the pandemic accelerate, or possibly interrupt, or overtake pre-existing features of economic policy? Because nobody can say how deep and long the current recession will be, and since we dont know how extensive the shutting down of the country will be, nor how effective the governments compensation intentions will be, we also cant know the scale of the destruction of business operations that policy might have to respond to.

Nor can we know what political consequences might flow from the circumstances of social discontent and the much higher joblessness and increased financial hardship as a result of a prolonged, inadequately alleviated shutdown. But in the absence of an even more destructive collapse, or a lockdown-catalysed political disruption on the scale of Brexit, at least three potential policy legacies can be identified.

To help contextualise these, we should take a critical approach to the mostly spurious narratives concerning Johnsonomics. These were present before the pandemic, but have been reinforced during it.

One of the most persistent myths is that Boris Johnson is a distinctively pragmatic, non-ideological, one-nation prime minister. Boris himself peddles this idea, not least when he took a dig at his supposed ideological predecessor Margaret Thatcher, asserting that there really is such a thing as society a reversal of Thatchers often quoted and often misinterpreted 1987 comment in a Womans Own interview.

Margaret Thatcher holds a Bank of England 1 note aloft, 27 April 1979.

This notion of Johnsons pragmatism being unusual is untrue. His record of reactive muddling-through on full display during the pandemic has been pretty much the norm among Britains prime ministers ever since the late 1970s. That was when bi-partisan, postwar, mixed-economy Keynesianism was abandoned. Until then, governments shared the economic objective of boosting growth and minimising unemployment. Ever since, economic policy has instead mainly reacted to things when they happen, guided mostly by the shared perspective of seeking to preserve what exists a case of small c conservatism. That tradition includes not just Tory leaders since the 1980s, but Labour ones, too.

Contrary to conventional portraits, it also includes Margaret Thatchers decade of premiership. Her image as a so-called neoliberal ideologue, was pushed especially by the left after she stepped down. And it is entirely bogus. Her policies were less ideologically driven and more a response to particular practical needs. For instance, her supposed hallmark policy of privatisation did not originate out of some ideological zeal of hers. It began under Jim Callaghans Labour government, when it sold off a chunk of its British Petroleum shares in 1977. Privatisation didnt even feature in Thatchers 1979 election manifesto, and took off only in her second term, primarily as a way to raise funds for financing public spending, and to keep debt off the governments books.

The muddling-through response to Covid-19 by this government is therefore characteristic of the conservative pragmatism of other recent governments. Perpetuating this style of governance fosters a short-termist, reactive form of policymaking that is often unequal to the challenges of modern life. Policy myopia isnt the only reason the government appears to have failed in its contingency planning for an epidemic, but it is certainly consistent with it. It contributes to this odd governmental dichotomy between anticipating worst-case disasters in the future, yet avoiding diligent crisis planning in the present.

An even more delusional narrative is that under Johnson the Tories have succumbed to the leftist idea that the state is better than the market. Ever since Decembers General Election, Panglossian Labour Party supporters have claimed their party may have lost the election due to unusual temporary factors, but that it had won the intellectual argument over the merits of state intervention.

The pandemic response has also reinforced this narrative. As Labours former leader Jeremy Corbyn opined last week: I didnt think it would only take three months for me to be proved absolutely right. In response to that, we might just say, dream on, Jeremy. However, we should recognise this mythical narrative has resonance especially among some young people, and may survive this pandemic.

The answer to this Labourist escapism brings us to another, and much more common myth, about Johnsonomics: that it is defined by a revival of the big state. Sunaks rhetorical responses to the pandemic notwithstanding being mostly unfulfilled so far seem to illustrate this in spades. But the idea that either BC or DC Johnsonomics is characterised by the return of economic statism is misleading. Not only is the Johnson government not enacting an alternative Labour Party agenda; more pertinently, it is also entirely consistent with the tradition of Conservative parties, as with Christian Democrat parties in Europe, and US Republican parties. These right-wing parties have generally been economic interventionist throughout their existence. Not out of ideology, but out of necessity. Their mature economies have needed state intervention to keep going.

Ever since the late 19th century, governments across advanced industrial countries have relied on the state to help support their economies through good times and bad. Indeed, since the end of the postwar boom, increasing state economic intervention has been the norm under governments of all stripes.

Initially, in the 1970s, state regulation and intervention was used to counter the effects of the generalised economic crises. When this endeavour failed, with the onset of stagflation, governments mainly sought to conserve their economies as much as possible. This was only partially successful, as it accompanied steadily falling business-investment levels, lower rates of productivity growth, and rising government spending, financed not from inadequate tax revenues but by expanding state debt. All these features built up bigger problems for the future. Nevertheless, the resilience of state-supported capitalism has been striking.

Johnsonomics is a break from the past four decades of state intervention only insofar as it is continuing intervention in a much more overt and unabashed way. And even that is not entirely new. Ever since the Western financial crash, the mainstream calls for economically activist governments have been getting louder. As many started to recognise the absence of economic recovery, the need for stronger government interventions has been more openly discussed. The shock of the 2016 popular votes for Trump and Brexit added to this push for more shameless state-economic measures. The rhetoric of small or minimal statism has had an increasingly small and minimal following.

The post-2008 experiences have led to a rising clamour for governments to adopt a more coordinated mode of state intervention, combining vigorous fiscal policies with ultra-loose monetary policies that, although irreversible, were plainly ineffective in reviving growth. For years, many former and even incumbent central bankers have been demanding that governments recognise that monetary policy cannot be expected to be the only game in town: fiscal activism was required merely to stabilise the economy.

Similarly, since the financial crisis the notion of state-industrial policies has made a comeback in many advanced countries. Public-infrastructure investment, in particular, has assumed an increased significance as a means to stimulate some economic activity, and benefit the so-called left behinds. Although governments, not least in Britain, have been slow to translate fine-sounding industrial-strategy documents into meaningful practices, this rehabilitation of industrial policies long preceded Johnson taking over as prime minister.

The openly interventionist course flagged up by the Johnson administration is thus neither a break from British practice, nor is it uniquely British. It follows similar patterns in other advanced countries a bit slower than Japan and the US, and a bit ahead of most Western European countries, especially Germany. Though, with the pandemic, it is symptomatic that even constitutionally balanced budget Germany has now launched a huge fiscal intervention amounting to over 350 billion so far or about 10 per cent of its annual output. This would have been unthinkable just weeks ago.

People queue to shop at Sainsbury's supermarket on 19 March 2020 in Northwich, UK.

State activism, with governments brazenly playing a bigger economic role again, is the first legacy we can anticipate from the pandemic. It will inform not just Johnsonomics but the approach to economic policy in many developed countries. In effect, treasury and finance ministers are asking us to forget everything they told us about public debt being an anathema, an abomination. Instead, they now contend that we have to spend to sustain the economy during this pandemic, be it printing money or borrowing funds. Now this Rubicon has been crossed, it will be very difficult for governments to turn back again over the medium term.

But this embrace of state interventionism, complete with vigorous fiscal policies, will not be sufficient to revive the economy. Recall that Japan entered its secular stagnation earlier than other industrialised countries after its financial crash in the early 1990s. It has been running a continuous fiscal stimulus ever since. Average annual public deficits of more than five per cent have left it with a national debt of about 240 per cent of GDP but, tellingly, it is still stuck in depression.

A big reason for this is that by propping up its sclerotic economy, a lot of this extra state spending has been increasing corporate dependency on the state. This applies not just to Japan, where the concept of zombie businesses originated, but also across the industrialised world. The wider apparatus of corporate welfare points to the way established businesses rely on state operations for a lot of their income, especially on public-sector orders and contracts, and on state subsidies of multiple types. In effect, many businesses no longer operate within the realm of market competition.

With the pandemic now justifying governments, not least Johnsons, undisguised economic activism, we are now seeing businesses blatantly seeking state support. This was something that in earlier times would have been done less boldly. But with businesses now falling over themselves seeking government help to survive, few even pretend to preach the virtues of the free market and free competition.

Indeed, one form competitive rivalry takes today is the sequencing in which firms request state aid. Holding back until other businesses in their sector have made their pleas to the treasury is a way to put their own rescues in a better light. We could have coped on our own, they protest, but once others got state help we needed to join them in the interests of a level playing field. That seems to be the stance taken in the aviation industry, as Ryanair and British Airways let others, like Loganair and Virgin Atlantic, put out their begging bowls first.

One potential consequence of increased economic interventionism through the pandemic is that as corporate dependency widens, then industrial concentration and sectoral stasis extends. This is what has happened in the banking sector after the financial crisis. Despite the official goal of encouraging new challenger banks, only a few of these have thrived.

Though it is mostly not deliberate, government efforts to sustain the economy tend to favour already established incumbent businesses. This is not just because they are regarded collectively as too important to fail, but also because the rules-based conditions that accompany business subsidies are much harder, and often impossible, for startups and loss-making scale-ups to meet. There is much evidence so far, during this crisis, of the difficulties young, ambitious, yet almost inevitably unprofitable firms are having when trying to prove their commercial viability to the intermediary banks that provide the governments emergency loans and grants.

Overall, buying economic survival, DC and AC, through closer public-private linkages, is likely to reinforce corporate welfare, and help sustain parastatal companies, thereby prolonging the Long Depression. Thus todays disaster prevention measures from Johnsonomics could well consolidate a less furtive but still stultifying economic interventionism.

The second, and potentially more dangerous legacy that could follow on from the first, is the greater acceptance not just of state intervention, but also of the national protectionism that this usually entails. Im not suggesting the pandemic implies the disappearance of the International Monetary Fund, or the collapse of the European Union (EU), or in general the demise of global governance. On the contrary, being a global virus, espousers of globalism are using the pandemic to justify the need for more globalist institutions and practices. The customary refrain is global problems need global solutions. But in practice during the pandemic, existing international arrangements are more clearly reflecting the national interests of their leading members, be they those of the US, Germany or France.

Maybe the existing divisions and fragilities of the eurozone and the wider EU will break more into the open because of the pandemic, though that probably depends on some progressive populist revolt breaking through, on a par with Britains Brexit vote. However, without that, we are already seeing the unashamed pursuit of national protectionist policies, not just in Germany and France, but also in Britain and the US.

The pandemic has already heightened anxieties in some quarters about national self-sufficiency, from the shortages of healthcare items and protective equipment, to foodstuffs and even prospective vaccines. This prompts the danger of galvanising narrow protectionist policies that could aggravate existing international tensions. And thats without exploring the way the pandemic is already fuelling anti-Chinese sentiments in the West, with Johnsons government reportedly joining Trump in declaring there needs to be a reckoning with China over the spread of the virus.

The area outside the Bank of England on 24 March 2020 in London.

A third potential legacy for post-pandemic economic policy is the reinforcement of regulation aimed at achieving so-called sustainable, responsible, stakeholder or caring capitalism. Again this is not out of the blue. It follows a decade and more of increasingly virulent business-bashing, not just from corporate-governance campaigners, but also from within governments, and within business itself. In response to the economys shutdown, there is already plenty of discussion about holding businesses to account for how they responded. Which were the villains? Did companies recently pay dividends to their shareholders (as if this is a heinous practice, even though dividends pay a good chunk of peoples pensions)? How did they treat their workers and their freelance contractors?

Some corporate deeds during the crisis, in particular badly treating their workers, or hiking prices to consumers, are genuinely serious matters and should be pursued by all of us, DC and AC. Profiteering through a crisis, if the allegations prove true, is reprehensible.

But there is also a danger here of buck-passing by politicians, who would be better occupied holding their elected government to account for what they did, or failed to do, BC and DC. If, on the basis of disreputable practices by a few business leaders, Johnsonomic policies regulate deeper into businesses so-called social responsibilities, it could be bad for business, bad for government accountability, and bad for democracy.

These dangers are especially acute if the restrictive policies for dealing with this health catastrophe are then extended without full and proper political debate and accountability into other areas that are likely to damage economic growth and prosperity. As alluded to at the start, proponents of tougher environmental policies have already been using the pandemic to assert that the battle after Covid-19 needs to be extended to fight carbon emissions. Already much effort is going into linking coronavirus to climate change, claiming that humans messing with nature causes them both.

For instance, Inger Andersen, the United Nations environment chief, claims that nature is sending us a message, both with coronavirus and with ongoing weather disturbances. Andersen argues that humanity is placing too many pressures on the natural world with damaging consequences, and warned that failing to take care of the planet meant not taking care of ourselves: Our health entirely depends on the climate and the other organisms we share the planet with.

Others talk of the pandemic as a unique opportunity to resolve a triple crisis: health, economic and environmental. Similarly, the Planetary Emergency Partnership, which is aligned with the Club of Rome, protests that Covid-19 reveals we are one humanity living on one planet, and that this planet is in the midst of a deeper and longer-term crisis of climate change and biodiversity loss. Accordingly, the Partnership is calling for post-pandemic economic recovery plans to prioritise the health of the planet as synonymous with the health of the people.

Such propositions draw out one of the dangers of the overblown analogy between containing Covid-19 and fighting a world war. Engaging in life-and-death contests with other countries can require the government to take abrupt and sometimes illiberal actions without being able to seek mandates from the electorate. Most people accept the temporary waiving of democratic approval during war.

The problem is that the analogy with wartime is being extended not just to the battle to overcome Covid-19, but to longer-term issues, too. For instance, people may, or may not, agree that there is a climate emergency. But what is an emergency for our democracy is if the pandemic is used to normalise emergency policies that entrench restrictions on economic growth, without prior extensive public discussion and authorisation.

We are in the midst of a severe man-made economic collapse, which arises from putting the response to the pandemic above other considerations. Thats a legitimate stance for government to take. A bigger danger is that post-pandemic economic policies take this as a precedent for putting other objectives propping up the zombie economy, national self-sufficiency, regulating business behaviours, or reducing carbon emissions above other considerations, without real public deliberation and examination.

If this happens, it could extend and deepen the pre-existing chronic economic condition. This would have more serious long-term implications for growth and prosperity than todays self-generated acute recession. That is not a trajectory we should slip into under the pretext that there is no alternative, and that, just as with Covid-19, something must be done. This applies especially to AC Johnsonomics. Now, as ever, we require and should demand genuine public discussion over the pros and cons of post-pandemic economic activism.

Phil Mullans new book, Beyond Confrontation: Globalists, Nationalists and Their Discontents, will be published by Emerald Publishing later this year.

All pictures by: Getty Images.

To enquire about republishing spikeds content, a right to reply or to request a correction, please contact the managing editor, Viv Regan.

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After the pandemic: whither capitalism? - Spiked

Bank Negara’s good and bad news – The Star Online

While Malaysia will not be spared from the global growth contraction this year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the central bank is confident that the Malaysian economy can weather the challenges.

BANK Negara has some good news and bad news on the economy in 2020.

In its latest Economic and Monetary Review 2019 report, the central bank has warned that Malaysia will not be spared from the global growth contraction this year as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic.

While governor Datuk Nor Shamsiah Mohd Yunus has carefully avoided the usage of the word recession for Malaysia, Bank Negaras official forecast points towards an economic growth in the range of -2% to 0.5%.

Output is expected to decline across all sectors, except for services, although it is forecast to witness a much slower growth.

The economic growth would be weighed down by the output loss from Covid-19, the movement control order (MCO) as well as the disruption in the commodity supply.

Nor Shamsiah: The central bank has a broad range of policy instruments at its disposal to ensure monetary and financial stability.

Meanwhile, with demand expected to remain subdued amid the low global oil prices, the countrys headline inflation rate is estimated to average between -1.5% and 0.5% this year.

This means that the country faces a potential twin threat - recession and deflation - if the economy contracts and the consumer price index declines this year.

To be sure, Malaysia has never encountered deflation on a full-year basis, even when the countrys real gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by 1.5% in 2009,7.4% in 1998 and 1% in 1985.

A deflationary pressure, if it turns severe, could further exacerbate the impact of a recession and delay the rebound in economic growth.

Another key concern highlighted in the Economic and Monetary Review 2019 report is the impact on export performance.

Bank Negara expects Malaysias exports to tumble by 13.6% in 2020 due to the weak external demand, as key trading partners of the country experience production interruptions following the Covid-19 pandemic.

For perspective, Malaysias exports declined by 1.1% last year.

Meanwhile, the countrys current account balance - while expected to remain in surplus - is forecast to narrow to 1% to 2% in 2020, down from 3.3% in 2019.

As the private sector takes a major hit due to the business shutdown in response to the worsening virus outbreak, the labour market is also likely to be impacted.

Bank Negara foresees a rise in the unemployment rate to 4% or 629,000 individuals this year, up from 3.3% in 2019.

In comparison, during the global financial crisis, the countrys unemployment rate was at 3.7% in 2009, while during the Asian financial crisis in 1998, the unemployment rate was at 3.2%.

The world, including Malaysia, is currently in uncharted territories as the global economy is hammered by a pandemic-induced slowdown.

It is, hence, crucial to understand that any forecast by Bank Negara or other experts will largely depend on how fast the world can solve the virus outbreak.

A prolonged pandemic could further weigh down the economy and result in a worse-than-expected performance. This includes Bank Negaras projections.

For now, the prospects for both advanced and emerging economies are deteriorating as the pandemic escalates.

The International Monetary Fund has recently warned that a global recession in 2020 will be at least as bad as during the 2008-2009 global financial crisis or worse, although it said that a recovery is expected in 2021.

The good news

On the domestic front, Nor Shamsiah is confident that the Malaysian economy can weather the current challenges and emerge stronger.

She adds that the central bank has a broad range of policy instruments at its disposal to ensure monetary and financial stability.

We have done it before in handling the previous crises. We can definitely do it again, she said during a virtual press conference on April 3.

Despite the headwinds, Nor Shamsiah points out that there are several key catalysts that will support the countrys economic growth in 2020.

These include the governments RM250bil economic stimulus package, Bank Negaras move to cut the overnight policy rate, the continued progress of public projects, as well as the higher public-sector expenditure.

She says the governments stimulus package alone is estimated to add 2.8 percentage points to the GDP growth in 2020.

Pakej Rangsangan Ekonomi Prihatin Rakyat 2020 will cushion the impact on households and businesses, she says.

Meanwhile, continuation of large-scale infrastructure projects will provide additional lift to growth.

Capital spending for major transport infrastructure projects of about RM15bil is expected to lift 2020 GDP growth by 1 percentage point, says Nor Shamsiah.

A key takeaway from the press conference is Nor Shamsiahs assurance that the current slowdown will not result in a banking crisis.

Being the bedrock of the economy, a collapse in the banking sector would trigger a systemic crisis that will affect other sectors in the economy.

The financial system is well positioned to support the economy, given the strong buffers built up over the years.

Banks have strong capital positions, with a total capital ratio of 18.4% as of February 2020 as compared to 12.6% in 2008. The excess capital buffers as of February 2020 is RM121bil as compared to RM39bil in 2008, says Nor Shamsiah.

She also points out that the Malaysian financial system has ample liquidity buffers. As of February 2020, the liquidity coverage ratio stood at 148%, up from an average of 137% in the 2015-to-2019 period.

In addition, adequate provisions have also been set aside.

The industrys loan loss coverage ratio was 125% as of February 2020, as compared to an average of 120% for the 2015-to-2019 period.

Our stress tests affirm the resilience of the financial system even under severe economic conditions. Capital buffers are sufficient to absorb potential losses, according to Nor Shamsiah.

The governor says that private consumption will continue to anchor domestic economic growth, even though it is expected to expand at a slower pace of 4.2% in 2020 as compared to 7.6% in 2019 and 8% in 2018.

Nor Shamsiah believes that the economy could see a recovery by the second half of this year, followed by a stronger growth in 2021.

What the experts think

Speaking to StarBizWeek, AmBank Group chief economist Anthony Dass says the probability of a full-fledged recession in 2020 is 40%, with room to be either upgraded or downgraded.

For the economy to dip into full recession mode, which we project at -1.1%, much will depend on how long the lockdown will be, the outlook of the commodity prices that has taken a hit, the risk of global liquidity crunch and domestic overall confidence, especially with rising unemployment that will dampen spending which in turn will impact business sales revenue.

Hence, avoiding falling into a full-fledged recession could be mitigated if the stimulus measures are implemented fast with improved engagement between the policy-makers and business communities, he says.

On price pressures, Dass says that deflationary risk cannot be ruled out.

According to him, the collapse in inflation expectations across many major economies including Malaysia is being stoked by the huge drop in oil prices to about US$30 per barrel and excess capacity from the virus impact and rising unemployment which will weaken demand.

The risk of falling into deflation depends on how policy-makers respond to the coronavirus outbreak. Our inflation outlook is 0.3% with the downside at -1.5%, says Dass.

On the other hand, Alliance Bank chief economist Manokaran Mottain does not expect deflation to kick in this year. He forecasts a mild inflation of 0.5% in 2020.

Despite falling oil prices coupled with weaker demand, in the first two months of 2020, we are experiencing 1.6% and 1.3% solid inflation, due to a low base effect last year, and we expect that with the renegotiation of Opec+, with the support of the US president to cut oil production, oil prices will rebound eventually, maybe during the second half of the year, he says.

Meanwhile, Socio-Economic Research Centre executive director Lee Heng Guie says that it would take at least six to 12 months from containment, stabilisation and recovery before people and businesses return to normalcy.

Even after the MCO is lifted, we expect continued stricter physical procedures and measures, including social distancing at public places.

We are pinning hope that the sizeable cash handouts and cash-flow cushion provided to the households would help to release pent-up consumer spending when the virus outbreak stabilises and sentiment improves, and hence, help to generate domestic demand, he says.

On the issue of unemployment, Lee says the jobless rate could rise higher than the projected 4% or 629,000 persons this year.

Higher retrenchments would weigh on consumer spending. The biggest worry is that those who are affected by a paycut or got retrenched during the six-month moratorium on loan facilities could face cash-flow problems to resume their loan repayment after the expiry of the moratorium period, he says.

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Bank Negara's good and bad news - The Star Online

It Was Never a Strong Economy For the Working Poor. Now’s the Time to Change That. – FlaglerLive.com

We are living in an intense time a time when major public policy failures and social inequality are revealing themselves after being hidden by a seemingly strong economy.

Over the last few years, record low levels of unemployment and a booming stock market helped conceal the still weak levels of household wealth, public infrastructure, and overall socio-economic fragility of most Americans. The coronavirus crisis is now laying those failures bare.

Many analysts failed to recognize that though the economy had been in recovery for nearly 10 years, most Americans have less wealth now than they did before the Great Recession. From 2007 to2016, median white families lost over $11,000. Black and Latino families lost abouthalf of their total net worth.

The coronavirus crisis is also showing that the problem goes beyond individual assets. Our weak public health, education, child care, and unemployment benefits, among other things, left the nation one crisis away from bringing down the entire economy.

That crisis has arrived.

Take the example of school closures. Since March 12, local and state governments have been closing school districts to limit the spread and speed of Covid-19. There are now nearly40 million public schoolstudentswho are home from school.

School closures were an essential and vital public health decision. Still, theyve shown that schools were an underappreciated foundation for our economy and peoples daily lives.

For workers with children, shutting down public schools with little to no other public support to replace this loss means at best a radical change of trying to work from home, teach from home, and provide child care all at the same time. At worst, it means sacrificing pay and possibly your job to care for your children as the country heads into recession.

Its important we realize how this virus hasnt just created new problems, as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez recently explained, but poured gasoline on the crises weve long had. Its okay if you didnt see the extreme urgency of these crises before, she added. But I hope you dont unsee them later.

The old saying of an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure is more relevant than ever as the country prepares to spend trillions on the coronavirus crisis. Now is the time to recognize well never beat a global pandemic and recession without strong mechanisms to deal with social inequality and the public good.

Now is the time to invest the trillions that have been made available by this crisis into a new 21st-century public infrastructure. The need for this investment has long been recognized from Franklin D. Roosevelts call for anEconomic Bill of Rightsto the civil rights movements1967 Freedom Budget but never realized.

One way or another, the United States will withstand the coronavirus. But the public in the wealthiest nation in the world cannot continue to be one crisis away from economic collapse.

Dedrick Asante-Muhammad is the chief of Race, Wealth, and Community at the National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC). Anneliese Lederer is the director of Fair Lending and Consumer Protection at NCRC.

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It Was Never a Strong Economy For the Working Poor. Now's the Time to Change That. - FlaglerLive.com

Scientists who cloned Dolly the sheep ‘in talks over coronavirus treatment’ – Metro.co.uk

The lab which helped to clone Dolly the sheep are set to help in the fight against Covid-19 (Picture: PA)

The scientists responsible for cloning Dolly the sheep are reportedly in talks with the Government over a potential coronavirus treatment.

Researchers from TC Biopharm near Glasgow have used the new therapy which uses immunity-building cell transfusions to successfully treat cancer and plan to use immune cells from young and healthy volunteers to battle Covid-19.

The Daily Telegraph reported they are now hoping it will also work against the virus, and are in talks with the Government to trial the therapy for that purpose. It is hoped that the therapy will be available in NHS hospitals by July.

Dr Brian Kelly, senior strategic medical adviser to TC Biopharm, told the paper: One of the key challenges of fighting viral infection is to develop something that is going to attack the infected cells and not the normal cells.

So the solution that we came up with was to look at the bodys natural defences to viral infection.

Dr Kelly continued: In patients who have successfully fought a viral infection, they have expanded their own immune system and that persists after that to stop them becoming infected again.

For our Coronaviruslive blogclick here.

For all the latest news and updates on Coronavirus,click here.

The donor T-cells differ from normal immune cells. That is because they do not identify invaders in the body based on alien protrusions on the surface of cells, but by detecting the unusual metabolism of viruses.

When the donor cells detect a virus, they begin to destroy while also signalling it to the rest of the immune system as an alien intrusion requiring eradication.

Dr Kelly said that with this approach even if the virus mutated and returned to a body the infusion exercise could be repeated and would still work.

TC Biopharm was founded by Angela Scott, who was part of the team who cloned Dolly the Sheep in Edinburgh in 1996 in an iconic scientific moment.

There is currently no cure for Covid-19 though various vaccines are at different stages in their development across the world.

Today the UK recorded another surge in deaths linked to people hospitalised with Covid-19, as a toll of 708 brought the official total to more than 4,000.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us atwebnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this,check our news page.

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Scientists who cloned Dolly the sheep 'in talks over coronavirus treatment' - Metro.co.uk

Cat Cloning Market Analysis With Key Players, Applications, Trends And Forecasts To 2026 – Science In Me

Cat Cloning Market Forecast 2020-2026

The Global Cat Cloning Market research report provides and in-depth analysis on industry- and economy-wide database for business management that could potentially offer development and profitability for players in this market. This is a latest report, covering the current COVID-19 impact on the market. The pandemic of Coronavirus (COVID-19) has affected every aspect of life globally. This has brought along several changes in market conditions. The rapidly changing market scenario and initial and future assessment of the impact is covered in the report. It offers critical information pertaining to the current and future growth of the market. It focuses on technologies, volume, and materials in, and in-depth analysis of the market. The study has a section dedicated for profiling key companies in the market along with the market shares they hold.

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Cat Cloning Market Analysis With Key Players, Applications, Trends And Forecasts To 2026 - Science In Me

10 Popular Anime Of The 80s That Time Has Forgotten | CBR – CBR – Comic Book Resources

During the 1980s, there was a gradual shift in the anime form. New animation technology was being reached and stories started to get bolder. Creators were able to do more anime that weren't just the standard shonen or shojo of the Osamu Tezuka or Go Nagai era but rather strived to become something else. Anime such as the groundbreaking Akira directed by Katsuhiro Otomo which helped lay the groundwork for future animes. Whileanimes like Akira have stuck with the viewer subconscious, there are some anime during the 80s that faded away from the casual eye.

Related: Every Katsuhiro Otomo Movie Ranked, From Worst To Best (According To IMDB)

Here are the 10 Popular Anime Of The 80s That Time Has Forgotten.

A science-fiction anime that came out in 1987, Royal Space Force: The Wings Of Honneamise, stars Shirotsugh who after being inspired by a woman named Riquinni, becomes the first astronaut in an alternate world. Directed and written by Hiroyuki Yamaga and composed by award winner Ryuichi Sakamoto, crafts an anime tale that's a coming of age story filled with personal strife.

Related: Gurren Lagann: 10 Reasons Why It's A Much-Watch Anime Series

A fun fact about this anime is that it was the first production from Studio Gainax, the same studio that created the super popular Neon Genesis Evangelion and later Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann.

Released in 1985 to director Mamoru Oshii and designed by Yoshitaka Amano of Final Fantasy fame, the film is 71 minutes that is more akin to visualart rather than telling a proper story. The science fantasy anime tells the story of an unnamed girlliving in an abandoned city finding food, caring for a mysterious egg. The film was critically panned by critics who criticized it's often sparse structure, but despite not finding work for years, Mamoru Oshii considers it one of the highlights of his career. Since then, the director has created many acclaimed animes including 1995's Ghost in the Shell.

Based on the 1978 manga simply called Cobra, the film was released in 1982 and it was directed by Osamu Dezaki. This science-fiction anime stars the titular Cobra as he's asked by the beautiful Jane Royal to stop the pirate guild and Crystal Bowie, Cobra's arch-nemesis. Cobra is armed with a special weapon called the "Psychogun" which is grafted on his left hand.

Related: 15 Best Sci-Fi Anime To Watch Right Now

The film has created a following amongst anime lovers and has inspired the likes of Hideki Kamiya when he developed the character of Dante in the legendary Devil May Cry franchise. Notably from the character's mannerisms and personality.

Produced by Kitty Films and running from 1981 to 1986, Urusei Yatsura stars Ataru Moroboshi, a perverted high schooler who is chosen by the alien race known as the Oni, to participate in their game. By touchingthe horns of an opposing Oni, humanity is able to retain the right to live on planet earth.

Related: Inuyasha: 10 Best Fights On The Show

After touching the horns of the oni, Princess Lum Invader, the anime shifts focus on being a slice of life focusing on the daily lives of both Ataru and Lum who sticks around after Ataru accidentally proposes to her. With twelve OVAs, six films and over 195 episodes, the series helped launch Rumiko Takahashi's career. Eventually creating the series known as Inuyasha.

Another Takahashi creation, Ranma 1/2 is a comedy anime produced by Studio Deen, taking place in the Chinese province of Qinghai. After falling into the cursed springs of Jusenkyo, Ranma and his father learn that they are able to transform into another being. Ranma is able to change genders while his father is able to turn into a fearsome panda. The anime is filled with the relationships between the main cast and supporting characters, which help drive the plot of the story. Combined with the arranged marriage overtone between Ranma and his betrothed Akane, creates an anime that became one of Takahashi's finest works.

Based on the manga created by Masami Yuki, Patlabor is a science fiction anime film directed by Mamoru Oshii and written by Kazunori Ito. The team behind the Ghost in the Shell film. Similar to Ghost in the Shell, Patlabor takes place in a technologically advanced Japan set during the year 1999. The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department is ordered to take down rogue robot units known as Labors, after they went haywire even after being shut down. One of the earliest works done by Production I.G,the film was a part of a franchise that contained several OVAs, light novels and sequel films.

A Japanese OVA, the dark fantasy anime Wicked City takes place near the tail end of the 20th century. Here, humanity is secretly co-existing with the demon world with the Black Guard police force being the bridge between the two. Incredibly erotic and violent, the production was the debut of director Yoshiaki Kawajiri. Best known for future anime works such as Ninja Scroll and the second Vampire Hunter D film, Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust. The film later got a live-action adaptation in Hong Kong also called Wicked City, although it changed aspects of the film such as thedemons being replaced with "Rapters"and overall creative liberties with the plot.

The original Vampire Hunter D film, produced in 1985, is a science fiction dark fantasy film about a vampire hunter simply called "D." Taking place in the far-flung future of 12,090 AD, D is hired by a girl named Doris Lang in order to protect her from the powerful vampire lord known as Count Lee.

Related: Vampire Hunter D: The 10 Scariest Moments In The Movies

Originally a series of novels with illustrations by Final Fantasy's Yoshitaka Amano, the film has since garnered a cult following amongst its American fanbase and was the first of many media adaptations of the franchise.

The other creation of Masamune Shirow's works, along with Ghost in the Shell, the 1988 OVA adaptation byStudio Gainax takes place in a post World War 3 Japan. Set in a fictional city called Olympus, the denizens of the city are humans, cyborgs and biological artificial beings known as the Bioroids. Sharing elementsrelating to post-humanism,the concept of a utopia and being an overall cyberpunk crime thriller, Although not as famous as Ghost in the Shell,Appleseed is still arguably a solid companion piece to those more familiar to Shirow's more famous work.

A Japanese OVA series produced by Studio Gainax between 1988 and 1989, it's directed by the creator of future Neon Genesis Evangelion fame, Hideaki Anno. Inspired by Top Gun, the anime takes place in the future of 2023 where humanity is fighting against an alien race known as the Uchuu Kaiju using giant mechas.

Running for about 6 episodes, the anime is considered the spiritual predecessor to Neon Genesis Evangelion, having a couple of elements following up from the anime. Sharing elements such as young teenage characters and giant robots fighting against an extraterrestrial threat.

Next: One & Done: The Best Single-Season Anime To Binge Right Now

NextOne Piece: 5 Characters Sanji Will Surpass (& 5 He Won't)

Richie Nguyen is an aspiring comic book creator and journalist living in Calgary Alberta. A lover of anything pop culture since childhood, Richie Nguyen is sure to write plenty about the newest comic book, manga and movie news. Having written journalistic coverage during his time at Mount Royal University's Calgary Journal, as well as interning in Tourism Calgary, Richie has plenty of experience writing things from general news to listicles. Outside of work, Richie actively plays video games, spends time with his family and friends, and of course drawing to one day achieve his dream.

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10 Popular Anime Of The 80s That Time Has Forgotten | CBR - CBR - Comic Book Resources

10 Web Design and UX Trends to drive better conversion rate – TechGenyz

Whats the very first thing a website visitor observes on your website? Or lets say what the first thing that draws customer attention is? Animations, graphics, color selection, logo all these things draw the first impression of your website and this helps the person to decide whether he will stay on the website or leave it right away.

Well, in the ever-evolving and fast digital world, you only get a few seconds to impress the customers with your web design; else the person will look for some other alternate and eventually invest in some of your strong competitors.

When the industry competition is becoming tougher day after day and with the growing demands and expectations of the website visitors, you need to plan a web design strategy that will not only attract the people but also results in a higher conversion rate. So, in this post, well explore a list of popular web design and UX trends that major industry leaders practice in 2020 so as to stay ahead of the race.

Lets get started!

No doubt, the technology has led us to go the extra mile from desktop views to smartphones, tablets, and other devices support. All thanks to the mobile-first design that has offered an outstanding user experience.

However, we are far away from designing content that is compatible with all sorts of devices smartwatches, desktops, phones, websites, and so on. There are voice platforms, personal assistant apps, or devices connected by the Internet of Things, in this case, we need to focus upon a content-first approach rather than only working upon the mobile-first design. This will definitely help in attracting a wider audience towards your business.

Users are always looking for innovative and impressive things over a website. The latest technologies in the design industry that are expected by the users will include vibrant, bright, and highly saturated colors. Numerous other color schemes will accompany gradients, surrealism, and pre-posthumanism that carry their own set of characteristics and feel to impress the customers in recent times and bring them towards your business.

So, in the coming time, customers will simply love and get attracted to bold, bright, and vibrant colors. Having a demanding and accurate color palette that has a set of lively colors is what businesses are going to focus on in the coming decade.

Contextual photography is basically an image that will capture a lot more than the subject and comprise of images that will help your brand connect with a sensory emotion and help your business stand unique from the rest of the competition. It will eventually help the customers grab attention towards your brands simply with the help of appealing images that clearly convey your business idea and products.

Nowadays, customers are getting more attracted to appealing videos since it consumes less time and is an attractive way to grab information. Businesses have started making videos for tutorials, social media ads, and even web banners in the form of GIFs, animations, and short videos.

Since people no more prefer reading lengthy text and love watching short videos, this is the reason videos have become a powerful marketing tool in todays time so as to grab a wider customer audience and experience better conversion rates.

Personalization has remained a buzzword for a long time, but the technical skills to implement it the right way has come just a year back. Well, personalization is just not confined to addressing a user by his name, however, it is about focusing on the customer interests, while the users are going through the purchasing process, and a tailored message is sent to direct them to the next step.

Since the customers experience a memorable journey over your website, they would definitely love continuing over your website.

Micro-interactions are ultimately getting the attention and appreciation it deserves. Designers know it very well that they have been waiting for this. Micro-interactions are soon going to become mainstream now. Well, micro-interactions are basically visual responses or animations customers will see while performing certain activities.

Micro-interactions will inform the customers while they successfully make a payment, added a product in the wishlist, or posted a review. It will further help in improving the navigation of the website and deliver a great experience while bringing the customers near to the conversions.

More and more industry leaders are planning to invest and work upon multistep forms this year. Multi-step forms will build the threatening parameter of lengthy forms and improve engagement with the help of touch gestures and micro interactions while reducing typing and deliver a rich experience to the users than ever before.

It is defined as the technique to arrange type for making written impressive while displaying. Emphasizing text is as important as focusing on the colors, thereby it becomes necessary for a business to work upon typography design in order to get better conversions. During this, you must focus on text size, font selection, tracking and kerning, leading, measure, and hierarchy.

Better the typography is, better your brand name will be in the market. Moreover, users not only prefer text, which seems appealing, but the one which is easy to navigate and well organized. So, make sure you use bullets wherever required, add titles, subheadings, and even try highlighting the important things throughout the text.

Masking is a technique that already many websites are using nowadays the tool hides specific areas of the image and reveals the other areas. This presents a mysterious view of the image and is quite appealing to the customers end. Since it has a contemporary look, it is becoming a popular trend in the entire design industry. The majority of the masking evidence and live examples can be seen on front pages, titles, and header sections.

Another thing that technology surprises us with is predictive analytics, which will be available for all-sized brands. In the coming time, predictive analytics tools will become an ordinary thing as email marketing platforms and landing page builders that further helps you transform your existing data in some competent predictions and higher conversion rates.

For instance, with predictive analytics, you can expect an advertising campaign that automatically adjusts as per the recent trend, weather, and all other important parameters that further helps in improving the conversion rates. To make this successful, predictive analysis maps the data history, spotting patterns, and detect the scenarios where adjustments can be made.

As technology and the web design industry continue to evolve and grows every day, we can expect more and more trends that will dominate the web design industry. However, the above web design trends that are expected to stay in the industry for 2020 and beyond. Masking, color schemes, predictive analytics, videos, all these trends are definitely going to bring a wider audience towards your business with fewer efforts. It further enables you to turn those website visitors into loyal leads, stay ahead of the competitors, and boost the conversion rates as never before.

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10 Web Design and UX Trends to drive better conversion rate - TechGenyz

This tiny island nation is setting the global standard for ocean conservation – AOL

Seychelles may be tiny, but the work its residents have done to protect its bustling marine life and gorgeous waters has an enormous impact.

The archipelago of 114 islands, located in the Indian Ocean off the coast of East Africa, is home to numerous beaches, coral reefs and rare animals.

Thanks to a new initiative, more than 30 percent of the countrys waters are now protected. The government has placed restrictions on environmentally damaging activities, such as certain types of fishing and human interference.

The protected area around Seychelles stretches about 171,000 square miles a portion of the globe nearly 1,000 times larger than the countrys own landmass.

Credit: Getty Images

Danny Faure, the president of Seychelles, said in a speech that meeting this goal means a lot for the countrys current residents, and for all future generations as well.

According to the Associated Press, he made a global plea for stronger protection of the beating blue heart of our planet.

We have a relationship with nature, and we depend on the ocean, he continued. And achieving this is a very strong message.

Only seven percent of the worlds oceans are currently protected. A few countries have pledged to increase those areas by 10 percent, but experts say its not enough.

Credit: Getty Images

Patricia Scotland, Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, says Seychelles is setting the standard for much larger countries.

Lots of people are saying, So, whats our excuse? Were bigger, we are wealthier. Is it that we lack commitment? And if we lack commitment, how can we change that?' she told the Associated Press. But for some people, theyre saying; We dont lack commitment, we just dont know how to do it.'

Leo Barret and his colleagues from the Marine Conservation Society Seychelles have been working to establish coral nurseries to help restore reefs near the country just one of the many steps Seychelles has taken to restore marine life.

What do you want your grandchildren to see? Do you want them to see a sea full of plastic pollution, full of bottles? he told the Associated Press.

Or [do] you want to be able to show the future generation coral reef, the fish biodiversity, this is something specific from the ocean, specific on the earth? I think we need to preserve that.

If you enjoyed this story, you may also like reading about how canners are making New York more eco-friendly.

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This tiny island nation is setting the global standard for ocean conservation - AOL

After Trump, Bolsonaro thanks Modi for supply of anti-malarial drug – Livemint

NEW DELHI :India woke up on Thursday to public expressions of thanks from the presidents of the US and Brazil for quick shipments of an anti-malaria drug, which is being tested as a possible treatment for covid-19, as infections from the novel coronavirus inched towards the 1.5-million mark worldwide and the death toll neared 90,000.

The messages from presidents Donald Trump of the US and Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil came as New Delhi prepared to ship consignments of the drug to some other countries badly hit by the pandemic like Britain, Spain, the UK and Germany.

New Delhi is also planning to dispatch medicines to some of its immediate neighbours, and others, such as Mauritius, Seychelles and Bahrain, in Indias extended neighbourhood, a person familiar with the developments said.

Indias supplies of medicines, especially #HCQ (hydroxychloroquine) and #paracetamol to several countries, including USA, Israel, Gulf, neighbours, etc confirm our role as first provider and help in global fight against #COVID19," Sanjay Bhattacharyya, secretary in Indias foreign ministry said in a Twitter post on Thursday.

Analysts said Indias so-called medical diplomacy" by first lifting an exports ban on hydroxychloroquine, or HCQ, in response to requests from several nations will burnish its credentials as a responsible citizen of the world" at a time when China is facing flak over its alleged lack of transparency over the covid-19 outbreak. The disease first surfaced in China in December. The UN Security Council is to meet later Thursday for a special briefing on the pandemic.

Extraordinary times require even closer cooperation between friends. Thank you India and the Indian people for the decision on HCQ. Will not be forgotten! Thank you Prime Minister @NarendraModi for your strong leadership in helping not just India, but humanity, in this fight!" Trump said in a Twitter post late Wednesday.

Bolsonaro, on his part, thanked India for the timely assistance" in an address to the nation made late Wednesday.

As a result of my direct conversation with the Prime Minister of India, we will receive, until Saturday, raw material to continue producing hydroxychloroquine, so that we can treat covid-19 patients, as well as malaria, lupus and arthritis," Bolsonaro said.

I thank Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Indian people for this very timely assistance to the Brazilian people," he added.

Both leaders had telephonic talks with Modi on Saturday.

Former foreign secretary Lalit Mansingh said Indias quick response to Trumps request of releasing the HCQ would score points in its favour given that US drug companies have been critical of India producing low-cost generic drugs in the past and New Delhi capping costs of critical medicines and equipment manufactured by the multinational firms in the past.

Mansingh noted that India had previously fallen foul of the large pharmaceutical companies for alleged intellectual property rights (IPR) violations as they produced generic drugs to treat HIV-AIDS.

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After Trump, Bolsonaro thanks Modi for supply of anti-malarial drug - Livemint

SIMPSONS short Playdate with Destiny heading to Disney+ – Comics Beat

The Simpsons short Playdate with Destiny will be available for streaming on Disney+ beginning Friday, April 10th. The Disney+ Twitter account announced the shorts streaming release with a handwritten letter from the Simpsons team.

The short, which stars Maggie Simpson, previously ran before PixarsOnward in theaters.But with movie theaters closed due to COVID-19, Disney moved up the streaming release date forOnward, which was made available on Disney+ last Friday, April 3rd.

Tomorrow, Playdate with Destiny will join the feature on Disney+, with the 2012 Simpsons short The Longest Daycare, being added to the streaming service later in the month. In The Longest Daycare, Maggie must survive a day at the Ayn Rand School for Tots (introduced in the classic season 4 Simpsonsepisode A Streetcar Named Marge).

If thats not enough Simpsons for you, there are a plethora of episodes available for your perusal right now: Disney+ currently has a whopping 30 (thatsthirty) seasons ofMatt Groenings seminal family sitcom. Thats over six hundred episodes, all ready to stream right now while you kill time waiting for Playdate with Destiny to be added tonight.

And dont forget one of the Simpson familys otherprevious outings on the big screen, 2007sThe Simpsons Movie, which includes a scene whereTom Hanks delivers a public service message in lieu of the United States government, which is forced to acknowledge that Hanks is a far more credible source of information than any Federal mouthpiece (huh, sounds familiar, for some reason).

If youre interested in streaming the thirty-first and current season ofThe Simpsons, it is currently available for streaming on Hulu, including the most recently aired episode, Highway to Well, which first aired on March 22nd. Also available for streaming on Hulu is Groenings other classic animated series,Futurama.

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SIMPSONS short Playdate with Destiny heading to Disney+ - Comics Beat

Opinion: Alberta separation was always a bad idea, and COVID-19 has shown it’s never going to happen – The Globe and Mail

A crowd attends a Wexit Alberta rally in Calgary on Nov. 16, 2019.

Todd Korol/Reuters

Max Fawcett is a freelance writer and a former editor of Alberta Oil magazine and Vancouver magazine

In politics, timing is everything. And when it comes to Albertas burgeoning separatist movement, the timing of COVID-19 couldnt be much worse. It was just last October, in the wake of the federal Liberal governments re-election, that it appeared to be building some momentum. And while Alberta Premier Jason Kenney argued that he didnt share their ultimate objective, he did effectively legitimize many of their other priorities by striking the Fair Deal panel to assess their merits. Their final report was due last week, but any recommendations it contains are almost certainly moot.

Thats because the fallout from COVID-19 is serving as a powerful reminder of how much we depend on each other and how much well need to keep doing that as we emerge from its shadow. For most of us, this growing sense of social and national solidarity is a good thing.

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But for Albertas separatist movement, its a major setback. Thats because, just as there are no atheists in foxholes, there wont be many people who believe theyre better off on their own after this pandemic finally passes. As Albertans stare at the possibility of an economic downturn thats reminiscent of the Great Depression, some of them are realizing they could use a little help from their friends even the ones they dont particularly like.

This is a nightmare for those who have been dreaming about an independent Alberta, one thats equal parts political revenge fantasy and Ayn Rand fan-fiction. Only once unshackled from the burdens of supporting the rest of the country and the ungrateful people in it who were holding them down, it suggests, will their province truly flourish.

The combination of their oil and gas resources and a determination to see them fully and unapologetically exploited would mean lower taxes, better services, more freedom and a long-overdue opportunity to watch the eastern bastards freeze in the metaphorical dark.

But that dream deliberately ignored the contributions that the federal government had made to their province and its oil and gas industry. It was the federal government that helped fund the oil sands in their earliest days and helped rescue them when a key American backer pulled out of the Syncrude consortium in 1973.

It was the federal government that implemented important tax changes in the 1990s that made the oil sands a far more attractive investment and helped kick off a decades-long building boom that disproportionately benefited Alberta. And it was the federal government that bought and is building the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, effectively doing for Alberta what the private sector couldnt or wouldnt.

The separatist dream of an independent Alberta also conveniently overlooks the fact that separating from Canada wouldnt mean separating from geography. British Columbia would still stand between Alberta and the Pacific Ocean, and the vast majority of its residents would want no part of a right-wing Libertarian petrostate, to say nothing of the many untreatied Indigenous communities who have made their feelings about Albertas favourite industry clear.

And as Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde has said, the Indigenous communities that do have treaties with the federal government expect those to be respected. You have to be careful when you go down that road of Western alienation, Western exit, he told the CBC. We have inherent rights; we have treaty rights, and those are international agreements with the Crown.

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I dont expect everyone who showed up at last falls pro-separation meetings to give up on their dream. There will always be a radical fringe of people who believe that Alberta would be better off if it separated from Canada, facts be damned, just as there will always be people who believe that the real source of climate change is the sun.

But I do hope that politicians such as Jason Kenney and Michelle Rempel, who have carefully nurtured the idea that Albertans are being mistreated by the federal government and used that feeling to advance their own political objectives and agendas, will stop trading in this fiction. Mr. Kenneys equalization referendum, for example, is a cynical effort to feed the sense of alienation rather than fix it. Now, more than ever, we need to be building bridges between different parts of the country, not trying to blow them up.

I also expect the federal government to rise to the occasion here, and use its financial clout to help the province that has done so much to help the rest of the country. For years, Alberta taxpayers made contributions to the federal treasury that werent matched by the transfers coming back, and the imbalance between the two fed the growing sense of alienation in places such as Calgary and Red Deer.

Now, its time for Ottawa to repay that debt. If it comes through with a sufficiently ambitious rescue package, it could even heal the divisions that have persisted between the two levels of government for so long and put an end to Albertas separatist movement in the process.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says Alberta will invest $1.1-billion and give loan guarantees to help Calgary-based TC Energy Corp. build its US$8-billion Keystone XL Pipeline project. The Canadian Press

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Opinion: Alberta separation was always a bad idea, and COVID-19 has shown it's never going to happen - The Globe and Mail

Disease is the greatest threat to bee health. Can we protect them through genetically engineered probiotics? – Genetic Literacy Project

If you cannot engineer the organism, engineer its microbiome.

Since scientists began exploring how to solve problems using synthetic biology, by focusing on microbial symbionts, a whole universe of possibilities has opened up. We have seen a hangover cure, synthetic probiotics for humans, and even microbes that help plants fix their own nitrogen. Now the focus is on bees to get their engineered probiotic, an idea that may save the insects from disease and insulate consumers from food shortages.

Domesticated bees and other pollinators play a significant role in growing many foods, although how much is debated. A significant percentage of Americas crops between 7% and 35% relyto some extent on bees. Wheat, corn and rice are wind-pollinated. Lettuce, beans and tomatoes are self-pollinated. But in some crops, bees are essential. Honeybees have a tremendous financial importance, not only for their honey but as the insects that enable the reproduction of (many) flowering plants. As wild insects cannot be relied upon to pollinate thousands of acres of monocultures, crop producers employ beekeepers to bring their hives close to their plants. This gave birth to migratory beekeeping, a practice now essential for cultivation of plants such as almond trees on a commercial scale.

Honeybees have evolved into a managed livestock, with a complex role in agriculture and established production and management practices. Beekeepers need to maintain healthy colonies. All bee colonies decline significantly in size during the winter months, but overwinter losses have increased over the past 15 years, and now hover around 40%. These persistently high mortality rates have fedinaccurate speculations about the cause, often blaming one class of pesticides, neonicotioids as the primary culprit. The evidence doesnt support that claim. The driver of bee health problems is known and its not pesticides nor agricultural production models; its disease.

Honeybees are susceptible to many infections from parasites and viruses. In fact, the co-infection with mite parasites and RNA viruses is particularly destructive for bees and accounts for a large portion of colony losses. The most common external parasites are the Varroa mites (scientific name Varroa destructor), which feed on the fat bodies of the bees. The deformed wing virus is another common hazard. This RNA virus uses the Varroa mites as disease vectors and infects the bee bodies, leading to developmental deformities.

Varroa infection treatment is difficult. Common methods include pesticides to which Varroa started developing resistance mechanical screening of bees, as well as teaching the bees to recognize and kill infected pupae. A more selective and effective treatment could save bees and agricultural resources, and this treatment might be already present in the bees gut microbiome.

In animals, DNA stores the genetic material, and RNA molecules are short-lived and execute specific functions. Ribosomal RNA has structural role in ribosomes, transport RNA carry amino acids, and messenger RNA carries the information needed to synthesize proteins. In contrast, many viruses carry their genetic information in RNA molecules. To defend against RNA viruses, cells have developed a sophisticated system called RNA interference, or RNAi. This complex molecular machinery recognizes double-stranded RNA and breaks it down.

Bees possess an efficient RNAi machinery that protects them from intruders at a molecular level. And researchers can use this system to protect bees against mites and viruses. If we insert RNA complimentary to the deformed wing viruss genome, it will form a double-stranded hybrid molecule. The RNAi machinery can now shred the virus genome to pieces, ending thus the virus infection. The same principle can be used to target specific parasite genes. And this brought forth the idea of injecting bees with RNA to protect against Varroa mites.

There are several problems with administering RNA to individual bees. RNA is a notoriously unstable and difficult to administer molecule. The treatment is short-termed. There are off-target effects. And its almost impossible to treat entire hives. Ideally, the bees would maintain the ability to produce the suitable RNA for a long time (or permanently), but would express it only in case of infection is happening. In theory it should be possible to insert the RNA gene in the genome of the honeybees under very tight control. In practice, though, this would be extremely tough. But while the process of genetically engineering insects is not very practical, the technology to modify bacteria is quite mature.

Bees, as every organism, have a rich microbiome. It should be possible modify one of these microbes to deliver the RNA cure to its bee hosts. This is exactly the idea researchers from the University of Texas explored in a recent article published in Science. Sean Leonard and his collaborators genetically modified the bacterium Snodgrassella alvi wkB2, one of the most abundant microbes found in the honeybee gut, to continuously deliver double stranded RNA.

The researchers first verified that engineered bacteria can establish themselves in the bees gut. They tested whether the modified S. alvi can deliver RNA to their host, and if this RNA can stimulate an RNAi response. As these early experiments were positive, the scientists tried to use the new probiotic to treat deformed wing virus and Varroa mite infections. Their results showed that the administration of the engineered microbe improved survivability, while the microbe by itself didnt seem to harm healthy bees.

This work from Leonard and the rest of the University of Texas team is an encouraging proof of principle. Their study shows that bee probiotics can confer parasite and virus resistance for several days to individual bees, though they dont show yet if such a treatment will work well on a hive level. Such an approach has the potential to be a versatile and generalized cure: the beekeepers could store and administer specialized probiotics for any possible outbreak. Bee probiotics would be very specific to the disease they teat and they would have minimal environmental impact (contained within the hives and disappearing over time).

Would honeybee probiotics get regulatory clearance? The question is a bit complicated. In the US, they would likely be regulated in same way as engineered human probiotics, which are already on the market. But the honey produced by treated bees and the pollinated crops are in regulatory uncharted territory, so nothing is assured as this issue is more ideological than science-based. The food products are definitely not GMOs as the bee or crop DNA would not be affected but regulators might nonetheless under political pressure to require proof about environmental and food safety, even though there is no logical scientific basis for requiring such information as there would be no detectable difference in honey derived from such bees. Most probably, countries with tougher GMO restrictions (such as in the EU) will be as skeptical of probiotics from RNA-modified bees as they are of other genetic engineering technology, and are unlikely to approve them.

Insects are organisms with immense financial, ecological, and social importance. Synthetic biology may provide ways to protect or control insect populations without the use of harmful chemicals, destroying habitats, or introducing invasive species ways that we currently employ with well-documented consequences. Engineering the microbiome is a way to solve biological problems by bypassing the hurdles of transforming complex multicellular organisms, a back door to make synthetic biology easier. And the honeybee back door is now pried open.

Kostas Vavitsas, PhD, is a Senior Research Associate at the University of Athens, Greece. He is also a steering committee member of EUSynBioS. Follow him on Twitter @konvavitsas

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Disease is the greatest threat to bee health. Can we protect them through genetically engineered probiotics? - Genetic Literacy Project

CSL Behring and SAB Biotherapeutics Join Forces to Deliver New Potential COVID-19 Therapeutic – P&T Community

KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. and SIOUX FALLS, S.D., April 8, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Global biotherapeutics leader, CSL Behringand innovative human antibody development company SAB Biotherapeutics(SAB) announced today their partnership to combat the coronavirus pandemic with the rapid development of SAB-185, a COVID-19 therapeutic candidate on track for clinical evaluation by early summer. The partnership joins the forces of CSL Behring's leading protein science capabilities with SAB's novel immunotherapy platform capable of rapidly developing and producing natural, highly-targeted, high-potency, fully human polyclonal antibodies without the need for blood plasma donations from recovered patients.

The therapeutic candidate, SAB-185, is generated from SAB's proprietary DiversitAb platform producing large volumes of human polyclonal antibodies targeted specifically to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Driven by advanced genetic engineering and antibody science, SAB's novel approach, leveraging genetically engineered cattle to produce fully human antibodies, enables a scalable and reliable production of targeted, higher potency neutralizing antibody product than has been previously possible. SAB's approach has expedited the rapid development of a novel immunotherapy for COVID-19 deploying the same natural immune response to fight the disease as recovered patients, but with a much higher concentration of targeted antibodies.

"COVID-19 is a nearly unprecedented public health crisis," said CSL Behring's Executive Vice President and Head of R&D Bill Mezzanotte, M.D. "That's why we're combining our leading capabilities in plasma product development and immunology with external collaborators to help find multiple, rapid solutions. In the near-term, SAB Biotherapeutics' novel immunotherapy platform provides a new and innovative solution to rapidly respond without the need for human plasma adding a different dimension to the industry-wide plasma-derived hyperimmune alliance effort we recently launched for the COVID-19 crisis. For future pandemics, SAB's platform may allow us to even more rapidly respond to patients' needs."

"Our targeted high-potency immunotherapies leverage the native immune response thereby providing a highly-specific match against the complexity, diversity and mutation of a disease," said Eddie J. Sullivan, PhD, SAB Biotherapeutics president, CEO and co-founder. "Our partnership with CSL Behring shifts our development trajectory to more rapidly scale-up and delivery of our highly targeted and potent COVID-19 therapeutic candidate, and deploy our unique capabilities to help combat this crisis. We have a successful preclinical track record for addressing infectious disease targets including Ebola, MERS, and SARS with our proprietary platform and appreciate that this collaboration with a global biopharmaceutical powerhouse will magnify the potential impact of a COVID-19 immunotherapy and provide an important framework for establishing sustainable solutions for the future."

CSL Behring has provided seed funding to offset some initial development costs that were funded by SAB in good faith, responding to the global pandemic as quickly as possible. SAB has already secured approximately $7.2 million in funding through an interagency agreement with the Joint Program Executive Office for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Defense (JPEO - CBRND) and Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA)to support SAB to complete manufacturing and preclinical studies. CSL Behring will then commit its clinical, regulatory, manufacturing and supply chain expertise and resources to deliver the therapeutic to the market as soon as possible, on terms to be agreed with SAB.

Earlier this year, the companies announceda collaboration to investigate SAB's platform technology as a new source for human immunoglobulin G (IgG) and the potential for new therapies to treat challenging autoimmune, infectious and idiopathic diseases by leveraging SAB's DiversitAb platform.

About CSL Behring CSL Behring is a global biotherapeutics leader driven by its promise to save lives. Focused on serving patients' needs by using the latest technologies, we develop and deliver innovative therapies that are used to treat coagulation disorders, primary immune deficiencies, hereditary angioedema, inherited respiratory disease, and neurological disorders. The company's products are also used in cardiac surgery, burn treatment and to prevent hemolytic disease of the newborn. CSL Behring operates one of the world's largest plasma collection networks, CSL Plasma. The parent company, CSL Limited (ASX:CSL;USOTC:CSLLY), headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, employs more than 26,000 people, and delivers its life-saving therapies to people in more than 70 countries. For more information, visit http://www.cslbehring.com and for inspiring stories about the promise of biotechnology, visit Vita http://www.cslbehring.com/Vita

About SAB Biotherapeutics, Inc.SAB Biotherapeutics, Inc. (SAB), headquartered in Sioux Falls, S.D. is a clinical-stage, biopharmaceutical development company advancing a new class of immunotherapies leveraging fully human polyclonal antibodies. Utilizing some of the most complex genetic engineering and antibody science in the world, SAB has developed the only platform that can rapidly produce natural, highly targeted, high-potency, immunotherapies at commercial scale. The company is advancing programs in autoimmunity, infectious diseases, inflammation and exploratory oncology. SAB is rapidly progressing on a new therapeutic for COVID-19, SAB-185, a fully human polyclonal antibodies targeted to SARS-CoV-2 without using human donors. SAB-185 is expected to be ready for evaluation as early as summer 2020. The company was also recently awarded a $27 million contract from the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) to leverage its unique capabilities as part of a Rapid Response Antibody Program, valued at up to $27 million. For more information visit: http://www.sabbiotherapeutics.com.

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CSL Behring and SAB Biotherapeutics Join Forces to Deliver New Potential COVID-19 Therapeutic - P&T Community

CAR T-Cell Therapy for Multiple Myeloma – Global Market Insights and Market Forecast to 2030 – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Yahoo Finance

The "CAR T-Cell Therapy for Multiple Myeloma - Market Insights and Market Forecast - 2030" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report delivers an in-depth understanding of the CAR T-Cell Therapy use for Multiple Myeloma as well as the CAR T-Cell Therapy market trends for Multiple Myeloma in the 6MM i.e., United States and EU5 (Germany, Spain, Italy, France and the United Kingdom).

The Multiple Myeloma CAR T-Cell Therapy market report provides current treatment practices, emerging drugs, CAR T-Cell Therapy market share of the various CAR T-Cell Therapies for Multiple Myeloma, the individual therapies, current and forecasted Multiple Myeloma CAR T-Cell Therapy market Size from 2017 to 2030 segmented by seven major markets. The Report also covers current Multiple Myeloma treatment practice/algorithm, market drivers, market barriers and unmet medical needs to curate best of the opportunities and assesses underlying potential of the market.

Reasons to Buy

Report Highlights

Key Topics Covered:

1. Key Insights

2. Executive Summary

3. CAR T-Cell Therapy Market Overview at a Glance

3.1 Market Share (%) Distribution of CAR T-Cell Therapy for MM in 2030

4. CAR T-Cell Therapy Background and Overview

4.1 Introduction

4.1.1 CARs Generations

4.1.2 Genetic Engineering of T-Cells

4.1.3 How CAR T-Cell Therapy Works

4.2 The promise of CAR T-cell targeting B cell maturation antigen (BCMA) in multiple myeloma

4.3 Current challenges in CAR T

4.3.1 Therapeutic side effects

4.3.2 CAR T-cells lack of success

4.4 CAR T-cell therapy: Route to reimbursement

4.5 Unmet needs

5. CAR T-Cell Therapy for Multiple Myeloma (MM): 6 Major Market Analysis

5.1 Key Findings

5.2 Market Size of CAR T-Cell Therapy in 6MM

5.2.1 Market Size of CAR T-Cell Therapy by Therapies

6. Market Outlook

7. Emerging Drug Profiles for Multiple Myeloma

7.1 bb2121: Celgene Corporation

7.1.1 Product Description

7.1.2 Research and Development

7.1.3 Product Development Activities

7.2 JNJ-68284528 (LCAR-B38M): Janssen Research & Development

7.2.1 Product Description

7.2.2 Research and Development

7.2.3 Product Development Activities

7.3 P-BCMA-101: Poseida Therapeutics

7.3.1 Product Description:

7.3.2 Research and Development

7.3.3 Product Development Activities

7.4 CAR-CD44v6: MolMed S.p.A.

7.4.1 Product Description

7.4.2 Research and Development

7.4.3 Product Development Activities

7.5 JCARH125 (Orvacabtagene autoleucel): Celgene Corporation

7.5.1 Product Description

7.5.2 Research and Development

7.5.3 Product Development Activities

7.6 Descartes-08: Cartesian Therapeutics

7.6.1 Product Description

7.6.2 Research and Development

7.7 CT053 : CARsgen Therapeutics)

7.7.1 Product Description

7.7.2 Research and Development

7.7.3 Product Development Activities

Companies Mentioned

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/auj3ij

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200409005373/en/

Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

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CAR T-Cell Therapy for Multiple Myeloma - Global Market Insights and Market Forecast to 2030 - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Yahoo Finance