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Economics & PolicyLabor

The jobsforlebanon initiative envisions a new labor paradigm for Lebanon

by Thomas Schellen March 27, 2020
written by Thomas Schellen

For those who are addicted to adrenaline rushes from springtime thrill rides, March 2020 may very well be as good as it can ever get. But only as far as the thrills of being exposed to the mother-of-all economic shocks. For the large majority of us, it is a world-engulfing nightmare. For the Lebanese, it is a nightmare that is embedded in a disaster. 

This fourth week in March 2020, jobless claims in the United States jumped by a record 3 million filings, and this is just one of the scary numbers from the global labor market. In macroeconomic terms, this month appears as prime candidate to enter the history books as a pinnacle of global economic shocks, a time when some countries started to think seriously about helicopter money and new economic formulas, and a time when Lebanese government officials felt compelled to wax lyrically about social responsibilities, the state’s duty to assist the people, and about money (money that is nowhere certain) for the support of suffering citizens and the army of newly laid off workers—an army of many divisions. 

But it is also a month when a new startup portends to offer “a glimmer of hope” for employment of people who call Lebanon their home (and who to continue to live here). Startup movement jobsforlebanon.com (J4L) was intended to be launched online on March 16, 2020, but leaped into existence a bit prematurely and unintentionally on March 10, its co-founder and newly minted president Roy Baladi tells Executive during an extensive interview with the J4L founding team (see Q&A). 

Over merely two full weeks of virtual life, the initiative encountered what Baladi says were spectacular rates of attention. “We had 26,000 people—probably almost 30,000 by now—come onto the site in less than two weeks; we had 118 jobs posted [and saw] Lebanese expatriates from 126 countries [visiting the website]—rich Lebanese in Nepal, Botswana, and Bhutan,” he says. “We had over 1,300 candidates apply to these 118 posted jobs and are now seeing hires happen. Four hires were completed. Also, more hiring managers and candidates are reaching out and saying that they were able to [arrange] jobs through jobsforlebanon.” 

The backstory 

According to Baladi, the J4L movement was conceived toward the end of 2019 during the thawra (revolution), at a time of high optimism fueled by the national unity witnessed in the rising protests. During a conversation with Baladi, J4L co-founder Yalda Aoukar expressed her dismay over having received a shocking number of appeals for loans or any sort of work and living income from highly qualified and yet out-of-work friends back home, and so she brought up the idea to call upon Lebanese expats in the diaspora to provide freelance jobs that could be worked remotely from Lebanon. Next was a conversation with another co-founder-to-be, Neal El-Jor Taouk who at the time was already engaged in the organization of a Lebanese expat network called Meghterbin Mejtemiin (Lebanese diaspora united) who, it was agreed, would commit to building the diaspora network for J4L.

This meant that two key building blocks for J4L were ready for sourcing: a recruitment tool and a network. Recruitment software could be sourced from San Francisco-based Smart Recruiters—a company whose business was the development and provision of exactly this type of software. Baladi, an early employee of the company, could access the product under a corporate social responsibility commitment by his employer. The nucleus of a diaspora network was also already in place. 

Constructing a narrative

In addition to this, Baladi, El Jor (a former Facebook employee and marketing and communications expert), and Aoukar (a finance expert and entrepreneur who is managing partner in an investment company), set out to find someone who would provide them with a snappy marketing message that could send J4L on a viral trajectory on social networks. They found Rhea Nasard, creative director at Lebanon-based agency its communication. 

By early 2020, while seeing Lebanon languish under its economic crisis and unemployment rise ahead of the days of the coronavirus crisis, J4L had its three main arrows in the quiver: a product, a network, and a message. “Our aim with this initiative was to provide a glimmer of hope and offer people in Lebanon a way to stay in their country, and empower the diaspora, like Neal said, to tap into a market place of extremely competent individuals who also happen to be your compatriots,” Aoukar explains. 

Next to join was Natasha-Christina Akda, lawyer and founder of a New York-based corporate advisory—and also a passionate advocate for Lebanon with high civic involvement. While progressing on its trajectory toward incorporation and a legal identity J4L met with a surge of attention in the days of the exploding global coronavirus crisis. In this context, it rapidly encountered interest not only from Lebanese job seekers and diaspora members but also from potential emulators of its non-profit recruitment model in countries from the Netherlands and Germany to Australia. The venture also established two outreach enhancement programs, one an ambassador program and the other a partner program.

Even more fascinating to this observer than this narrative of growth beyond expectation is the way in which J4L’s own path and experience mirrors its founders’ vision and aims. Here is a core team of diverse Lebanese expatriates who “made it” and by all appearances built viable existences in important economic hubs and vibrant sectors. This team links back to Lebanon but does not follow an—often seen and not always successful—track of moving physically back into the home country for the Lebanese economy to benefit from all they acquired abroad in a reverse migration of brainpower and skills. Instead, they clone their own cultural and entrepreneurial DNA into a platform that has global potential—with Lebanese ingenuity inside. Irrespective of its somewhat parochial name, which might evoke misgivings of a narrow agenda and nationalism, this new online startup initiative comes across as not exclusionary, nor racist, nor populist, nor politically exposed. It is not just about Lebanese jobs either, at least not conceptually and not in the long run. 

Caveats and potentials

There are caveats, as with all human endeavors and daring innovations.  While the enthusiasm and creative energy of the J4L team are as laudable, as their optimism and dedication to their self-chosen mission, assurances by team members that this team will “always” remain committed to the movement irrespective of what changes it might undergo and how responsibilities might shift from board oversight roles to operational officer roles have to be regarded with a caveat about the very limited predictability of human relations over multi-year time spans. 

From a perspective of potential conflicts of interests and corporate behavior, the, at this point exclusive, reliance of J4L on the software solutions of Smart Recruiters, which itself is said to operate under a software as a service (SaaS) business model, in conjunction with the overlap of Baladi’s personal involvement as president of J4L and as head of communications in charge of corporate social responsibility at Smart Recruiters, some cautiousness seems to also be warranted. Even as a casual look and reputation check of Smart Recruiters does not raise any red flags, it cannot be overlooked that the company is a fairly young corporate partner, which undertook a Series D funding round a little less than one year ago and raised $50 million in this round according to US-based tech website Venturebeat. 

Further, it can not be ignored that the operation of a recruitment platform using algorithmic and artificial intelligence (AI) that is incorporating processes for vetting candidates for their technical skills, language proficiency, personality, and backgrounds by third-party providers is not necessarily void of errors or even biases (such as male chauvinism seen in genderless AI). Moreover, the field of recruitment companies is marked by high competitive pressures. 

Finally, when looking at the Lebanon aspect of the J4L equation from the perspective of the enormous rise in competition for finding work across most national and all international labor markets, the horizon for 2020 and 2021 is clouded to a fright. The rise in US jobless by a brutal three million people in a single week this March and an Chinese urban unemployment statistics showing five million people to be out of work for the months of January and February—with forecasters’ expectations of another increase due to global vanishing of demand for Chinese manufactured goods for at least several months—imply a glut of labor supply in the world’s two largest economies. Even if only 5 or 10 percent of this added rise in eager job seekers were highly qualified or experienced, their number would be overwhelmingly large when compared to the number of the entire Lebanese labor supply. 

J4L’s repeated assurances and conviction that this country has an abundant supply of highly skilled and multilingual candidates for employment or freelance positions on global level must be thus juxtaposed with the fact that—while job seekers from other countries of origin may or may not be equipped with on average equivalent skill level, motivation, multilingual background, tech savviness, or entrepreneurial drive—there is no denying that the absolute number of Lebanese talent does not measure up to the numbers of job seekers from much more populous countries. This observation applies not just in these days of high global unemployment but even at times when corporate demand for labor in coming years might be reaching levels that are closer to full employment—which is in itself a doubtful proposition in a decade where speculations over job destruction due to increased automation and substitution of human workers by AI have been globally rampant for the last few years. 

In terms of numbers, furthermore, the one-year vision of seeing 50,000 jobs happening in Lebanon due to J4L and its partners, which J4L’s Baldadi very determinedly stated to Executive (see interview), would require a disproportionate candidate pool, given the average 100:1 ratio of job candidates per successful hire that is assumed by J4L itself—even when assuming an extensive involvement of partners of over 50 percent in the supply creation and hiring activity. In a rough back-of-the-envelope estimate, a pool of 2 million candidates (for achieving just 20,000 hires at the anticipated 1 percent conversion rate of applications to hires) would have to exceed the entire working-age Lebanese population of 2021, let alone the pool of top-skilled university graduates or experienced professionals—such as teachers, designers, journalists, researchers, lawyers, copywriters, and creatives—that are on the prowl for better economic opportunities.      

Caveats over risks and fundamental uncertainties are common and prudent in contemplating daring economic propositions and projects—and more so than ever in a period of an unprecedented global economic shutdown, recession, and unpredictability. Resilient to any caveat, however, is the impression of the J4L core team’s professionalism, strategic thinking, individual commitment, passion, and collective emotional intelligence. 

Despite the uncertainty that must be apportioned to any prediction of how the global labor markets, labor practices, and AI-driven or human-driven human resource acquisition patterns will develop in the coming year, and years, bona fide social-good centric recruitment as professed by J4L is an enterprise that is not just worth watching for jobseekers and to link up to for job creators from the diaspora. It is equally worth tracking for labor-focused policy-makers, activists, researchers, and reporters. From this perspective, it would be ill-advised to presently preclude anything as far as J4L. This movement’s involvement in and for Lebanon could well generate a positive labor push and produce something that significantly exceeds initiating a few positive growth impulses and sparkling comet tails of hope for the country’s large pool of individuals who are desperate for dignified work and livelihood.  

March 27, 2020 0 comments
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Economics & PolicyLaborQ&A

Q&A with the team behind jobsforlebanon

by Thomas Schellen March 27, 2020
written by Thomas Schellen

They want to bring jobs to jobs-starved Lebanon. They also want to do something that has been tried many times and rarely been crowned by success: mobilize direct investments into Lebanon from the country’s large global diaspora. Specifically, they want to seed job investments—work opportunities that can be located anywhere in the world, yet be done by people in Lebanon. They have combined both missions into one vision that they are chasing. “They” are a cheerful group of successful expat professionals with a brand-new online venture that can be found at jobsforlebanon.com. To learn more, Executive talked, naturally remotely by video conference, with jobsforlebanon (J4L) team members Roy Baladi and Neal El-Jor Taouk in San Francisco, Natasha-Christina Akda in New York, and Yalda Aoukar in London.  

As you are telling me, your initiative for creating jobs for Lebanon has met with a very positive initial response and is moreover already evolving. How do you explain that this initiative is so successful with the diaspora? And as your platform is changing, will J4L activities still be focused mostly on channeling remote jobs for Lebanese freelancers, as was said in some early reports, and do you expect partner organizations to help with scaling in terms of job offers?  

Yalda: The reason that this is really resonating is because [faced with the problems in Lebanon] there was a lot of appetite from the diaspora to get involved. But they were not knowing how to get involved or what the right channels are. 

Roy: Starting with the vision that we have for ourselves: [We envision] that one year from now we will have a very reliable source of jobs for Lebanese where people can export their skills without necessarily having to export their bodies. This becomes a reliable source of jobs, a reliable source of income, and an alternate economy. To get to that level, we aim to unite the Lebanese diaspora wherever they are, having a global expat network with a simple message: Hire a Lebanese in Lebanon.  

Neal: The beautiful thing about this movement is that it is growing and changing shape as it grows. Even though we started as an initiative to bring jobs to Lebanon as freelance opportunities, we are now in talks with several industry-specific agencies in Lebanon who are interested to partner with us to open it up to even contractors. This is making it scalable on the Lebanese level and even more beautiful is that the movement is going to be scalable to other countries.  

You seem to be working on modifications to the J4L approach also on the demand side, meaning its functionality for Lebanese job applicants. Can you elaborate?   

Roy: What we are doing right now in Lebanon is to start making it easy for not just individuals to say ‘I am interested in this job,’ but also for teams, so that they can come in and say, ‘We are a team of creatives and can take over a project.’ 

Do you want to operate continually as a not-for-profit enterprise, as a civil society organization (CSO) or non-governmental organization (NGO), or as a for-profit social enterprise? Are you working toward a commercialization model and are you seeking to monetize the site, for example by charging commissions from talents who found a freelance job via J4L?  

Roy: After talking about what we will be, an NGO or a [Certified B Corporation], we have decided to be an NGO. We want to be self-sustainable as an NGO but we are not looking at this as a for-profit venture. This subject is where Natasha comes in. 

How do you want to sustain J4L then beyond the initial phase of enthusiasm-driven volunteer work, which is how you appear to be operating at this point? 

Natasha: This is a question that every entity and organization has to confront. The team of volunteers has thankfully very early on started to look at the long-term sustainability for the organization and the movement, and how do we plan our next steps and how do we institutionalize these next steps so that we can continue to exist and serve in the long run. As Roy said, the original conversation ran between either incorporating as a non-profit or as a B-corp. These were the two main options just because this team wants to make sure that the mission and spirit of the movement are legally protected at all times. This is not about money.  However, money is required to make sure that this process can continue in the long run.  

How are you planning to obtain this money?  

Natasha: They have started by creating a non-profit organization that is a self-sustaining social good enterprise. There are also different ways built into the model so that they are going to be able to monetize the business and structure that they have implemented. The board of directors has already been identified. As [the movement] starts to get larger and more time is taken up, those roles are going to morph from board of directors to officer roles and at that point there will be a conversation about how we take this to the next level. Right now I think this is still premature because all energy, all effort, and all finances are dedicated to the movement and not to the individuals.  

Has each participant in the founding team contributed and pooled hard cash to make this vision happen?    

Roy: We have so far funded it ourselves.    

How do you plan to sustain the movement’s operational momentum and growth in the long run? Do you have targets or KPIs, key performance indicators for monthly increases in a) the supply of job opportunities and b) the number of job applicants? 

Neal: We meet on weekly basis to discuss everything that happened in the past week and what we plan on doing in moving forward. We have four initiatives within this movement, one being the product function where we do everything to improve the product to make sure that we can provide the best service possible; we have the marketing department that is in charge of everything creative and branding, as well as of course social media. We then have a business development function that is in charge of the ambassador program, the partnership program, and any other outreach that needs to be done. Finally, there is legal. Each of the four functions has their own set of KPIs, all of which feed into a main one, which is to seed as many jobs as possible and get candidates which will then hopefully translate into new hires.  

To go into the practical side of the matchmaking between candidates and job givers: Are you vetting prospective job suppliers and vetting prospective job seekers in any way or just trusting everyone to be honest? Do you do background checks?  

Roy: In the product, there are three ways in which you can vet the candidates. The first thing that you can do with the product is to compare. It has an algorithm to give a ranking to each candidate relative to the job. So you start with an ordered list with a percent fit of every candidate to every job. The second thing is that based on the responses of the candidate [via a variety of presentation formats], the algorithm can read their command of the English language, or the German or French language—40 plus languages in all. That is an objective metric done by a third party that tests the validity of a person’s skill. The third tool that you have are background checks.  

Are these functionalities connected to the Smart Recruiters software as part of the backend package?  

Roy: Correct. Smart Recruiters is a company that is ten years old, has 80 engineers, and that is supporting more than 4,000 companies all over the globe using it at this very moment. We have the ability to use that product in order to repurpose it for jobsforlebanon. So yes, it is in the back.  

How are you then protecting J4L to not become a marketing outlet as a covert profit-oriented enterprise, or from being perceived as a marketing outlet for Smart Recruiters?  

Roy: Smart Recruiters has done the one percent pledge, giving away one percent of the equity, one percent of the product, [and] one percent of the time of employees. I look after these CSR initiatives. It is a cost for Smart Recruiters to offer the software for free for Lebanon and it is the same thing for Germany and Ireland, Australia and the other countries, but this is also part of the mission of Smart Recruiters.  

So you as president of the NGO will be the guardian to make sure that Smart Recruiters doesn’t use this network and the movement’s social good centered outlets as a way to gain influence and make money?   

Roy: Yes. As the president, I look after that, and our whole team does too. But also every partner that comes in and connects with us is offering something as well as getting exposure. So as we partner with BDD, they are offering their office space at cost for our community that gets hired. [In turn], they will get advertisements on our platform. Similarly, [this applies to] any partner that comes in. Every piece that comes together is going to benefit from exposure and good will coming out of it. This is part of the collaboration. It is a fringe benefit of being part of this movement that you are betting on and which will help grow an economy. 

Natasha: I want to add to what Roy was saying. We as a team are very conscious of the risks and the entire team is very protective of the mission and the underlying philosophy and spirit of the work that is being done. As part of that, from a legal standpoint, the social good components are actually being built in as part of the contracts that we are developing with our future partners so that we can make sure that we protect the product itself and the nature in which it is presented to the world.  

As your name hints to jobs in Lebanon, how far are there restrictions requiring candidates that want to join the community to be Lebanese or live in Lebanon? Could I for example, as someone who has lived some 23 years in Lebanon but is a German expatriate here, be eligible to be among the talent on your platform or would you say, ‘No, you are not Lebanese and can’t participate’?  

Roy [chuckling]: There is no way for us to restrict this. This product is an open product where anybody can create a job and anybody can post a job. When you post a job, anybody can apply. However, there is a lens. The campaign that we have is geared primarily toward calling on Lebanese, wherever they are in the world. Also [we aim] beyond the diaspora, if you are not Lebanese and want to hire someone in Lebanon, because the [availability of] talent [for hire] in Lebanon is honestly very high at the moment. This is because of the layoffs and unemployment that have been done due to a systemic issue, not a job performance issue. I am meeting people with 15 or 20 years of experience that have been let go. So there is a skill abundance in Lebanon at the moment; our main campaign is calling on anybody who wants to hire those people without making them leave the country. However, anybody can apply and if they do and are well vetted and get the job, this is excellent.  

In your initial outreach to the Lebanese diaspora, did you start using any existing database of Lebanese expats or did you work on peer-to-peer basis?  

Roy: Peer-to-peer. We did a bit of information research in terms of journalists and in terms of the embassies and their contact information and charted [those groups] but we did not [use practices found elsewhere such as scraping websites for jobs]. With us, it was zero catalysts and zero jobs. [The network] populated organically. 

From a Lebanese perspective, the issue of the diaspora has what everything in Lebanon has, namely a political connotation and not necessarily the most innocent one. Do you, as a movement, have any political links in Lebanon or internationally with political organizations in the diaspora?  

All in unison: No.  

Do you have any partnerships with any Lebanese bank as part of their CSR activity, financial intermediaries, with someone like IM Capital or anybody in the venture capital space in Lebanon, with the Capital Markets Authority or Banque du Liban (BDL), Lebanon’s central bank? 

Roy: Everybody is shaking their head.  

So you are all financially outside of Lebanon and emotionally inside of Lebanon? 

All interviewees: Yeah. 

And may I presume that—merely in an operational sense—it was almost serendipitous for J4L that the coronavirus struck in the Middle East just at the time when you were ready to start rolling?  

Yalda: We are going to see a massive shift to teleworking. Everyone in the world is now working from home and a large part of the jobs that are now being conducted remotely will continue to be conducted remotely. That can only serve our mission. It is our hope that due to its highly skilled, multilingual population that has a very strong aptitude as well in the field of technology, Lebanon will become the destination of choice [to hire people that work remotely], at least for its diaspora.  

In the promotional video there was the number of 16 million mentioned with respect to the diaspora, but this is a wide count and a bit of a popular myth considering that this includes millions who are descendants from people who emigrated three or four generations ago. What is your addressable market as far as entrepreneurs in the Lebanese diaspora who can create and offer jobs?   

Natasha: You will be surprised. I have family in Mexico, distant relatives, some of whom have not even been to Lebanon but they eat their grandmother’s [Lebanese food]. As soon as we launched that promotional video, third generation Mexican-Lebanese were telling me that they loved it and were sharing it with their network of 25,000 people that are part of a Lebanese club in a district of Mexico City. Let’s not underestimate the power of the emotional ties of the Lebanese.  

Also I think that 16 million [as a target outreach number] would mean that we are limiting ourselves. [Stipulating an] addressable market of 16 million people for me is really underselling ourselves. Lebanon has extreme talent to offer to the world. Our aim of connections with the Lebanese diaspora is our first step.  

So you want to reach job creators internationally beyond the Lebanese diaspora?  

Natasha: Yes. In our team of 23 people, we have people that work for Facebook, for Google, and for some of the largest corporations in the world. If at some point we can forge partnerships with these huge organizations, [this would be] a power that goes beyond the 16-million diaspora.  

Would it then be correct to say that you want to scale up from the job givers among the Lebanese diaspora to other mega-large corporations or even SME job givers all around the world who are not linked to the Lebanese diaspora?  

Neal: That would be safe to say. One thing to mention is that, before the launching, we took part in a conference and participated in a hackathon. In this conference it was very interesting to see the feedback from non-Lebanese people. I was positively shocked how emotionally touched non-Lebanese people were by this initiative.  

In wrapping this interview up, do you have a target ratio regarding job offers versus applications? It seems that you now have about ten or 11 ratio to one in terms of applicants for each job. But as it has occurred especially in times of high job demand that 500,000 people sometimes apply for something like ten available jobs. This can be a strong deterrent from any job initiative. What is our target ratio in this regard? 

Roy: It takes roughly ten applications per interview and ten interviews per hire, so one percent of people who apply get hired. So it takes about 100 applications for one hire. Right now we are trending at about ten or 12 to one. Our KPI is the one—the job. Our focus is really on maximizing the number of jobs and maximizing the number of hires and everything else will fall into place. Yes, we can fall into the trap of getting too many applicants to very few jobs. We are very focused on this issue and that is why our KPIs are the way they are and why our organization is broken down into departments that are focusing on those KPIs.  

It seems that you are applying time-tested or newly orthodox recruitment methodologies, including assumptions of ratios on what real chances job applicants have when they apply. Do you plan for any education effort for candidates to explain how big or small their chances are when they apply? 

Roy: Yes. As Neal was mentioning, we have four departments. In the product department, we have product and product education. We are putting in motion right now video tutorials that reach the two segments, the candidates and the hiring managers. This includes education and surveys to keep our finger on the pulse of who is coming into our system.  

From all that you have told me, you are not looking to terminate your project after the corona recession ends, whenever that is. You are in this for the long haul and envisioning an institutional future that is open ended and benefiting from the worldwide shift to more home office work and remote work. Is that correct?   

Roy: Yes. As for where we want to see us in a year, we want to see very large hype and first of all a large number of Lebanese—we cannot put a number to it yet but internally we say 50,000. Visions are sometime based on bets so let me say we anticipate 50,000 jobs happening in Lebanon with jobs that they obtained from jobsforlebanon and partners. Anybody who is working on this mission, is a partner of ours. [In addition to the 50,000], we [foresee] another pipeline of 100,000 plus jobs that are on the platform and ready to hire and make this a sustainable major sector of the Lebanese economy. That is what we are hoping to see in a year.   

Our analysis piece on the J4L initiative can be read here.

March 27, 2020 0 comments
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AgricultureCoronavirus CloseupOpinionQ&A

Q&A with Nadine Khoury, COO of Robinson Agri, on how COVID-19 has impacted agriculture

by Nabila Rahhal March 26, 2020
written by Nabila Rahhal

Lebanon’s ongoing economic crisis has highlighted the importance of well-functioning productive sectors—namely agriculture and industry—to a country’s GDP and economic well-being. This was further emphasized with the COVID-19 global pandemic significantly slowing down trade, disrupting food supply chains, and forcing each country to think of its own supply needs first.

Executive spoke with Nadine Khoury, chief operating officer of Jbeil-headquartered Robinson Agri, a greenhouse producer and provider of agricultural and irrigation products and services with customized turnkey projects, to learn about how COVID-19 is impacting agriculture in Lebanon and what potential opportunities can be gleaned from this challenging time.

How has COVID-19 impacted Lebanon’s farmers and the agriculture sector in general?

In Lebanon, the agriculture sector was already suffering from the severe economic crisis and now their challenges have been compounded with this crisis. 

In his March 22 statement, the minister of interior placed the agriculture sector on the list of exceptions [that can continue to operate under certain conditions, despite the lockdown] and the minister of agriculture also stated (in a decree issued on March 23) that farmers and agricultural companies can continue to operate, but under reduced hours.

This is important because agriculture companies are an essential part of the food supply chain and we should make sure that our country’s food supply is not disrupted by unforeseen events. For example, at Robinson Agri, our skeletal warehouse is open only on schedule for the delivery of materials and the receiving of orders, although now it is the growing season and the whole sector is usually busy. 

Another problem is that growers need workers to sow seeds and seedlings and do other tasks, as most farms are not yet mechanized in Lebanon and we don’t have the machinery whereby one employee in a plant machine can plant the whole field. Because of COVID-19, farmers have reduced the number of workers on the field and are following precautionary measures so the growing phase is taking a longer time.

In times like these, it is very important for us not only to give tribute to healthcare providers but also growers and food suppliers who are working daily to bring food and fresh fruits and vegetables to our plate.

Do you think that this crisis will serve to foster more value and consideration for the agriculture sector?

We cannot take the agriculture sector for granted anymore. Lebanon’s economic crisis opened our eyes to the importance of productive sectors, especially agriculture. Studies from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) indicate that 65 percent of the land in Lebanon is arable and yet only 25 percent of that is planted.

So the potential is huge.

Yes, it is. What is happening today is that because of the corona crisis, we are no longer able to import [foodstuffs and agriculture supplies] as much as before. In Lebanon, we already had difficulties importing because of the liquidity problem, and now, because of corona, each country is taking care of its own needs first. What is affecting the world is also affecting us and here we are talking about decreased productivity, decreased transport etc.

To give you a simple example, I am now being asked to place orders from European companies five months in advance whereas before orders needed a maximum of 20 days to be processed. This is because globally all companies have reduced their working hours and are under a lot of pressure.

What will be the impact on this season’s harvest and our supply of locally grown vegetables and fruits?

We had already received seed varieties for some families of products before the corona crisis had started but were too late for the irrigation equipment and some fertilizers.

Because of the economic crisis, many growers had already planted roughly half the amount they usually do. Even if, let us consider that, consumers will stick to the bare minimum of food needs because of their decreased purchasing power, the produce we are talking about are considered basics. In Lebanon, can you live without tomatoes when a big portion of our cuisine is based on tomato sauces? There are some vegetables and fruits that are considered luxuries and one can live without them, but a lot are necessities and less of them has been planted this year.

Also, because of the corona related closures, the season has been disrupted in that many growers delayed planting by up to three weeks (since warehouses decreased their working hours, it takes more time for the farmers to secure the needed seeds).

Will this delay affect the produce?

Yes of course. When you delay planting, it shortens the season and reduces the amount of fruits or vegetables that you harvest. Also, if after planting growers don’t have access to quality fertilizers, plants will not grow properly which will impact the produce.

Agriculture engineers are no longer able to physically visit farmers anymore. Sometimes growers do send them pictures of the plants and agriculture engineers address the issue remotely but it is not the same [as being physically present].

When will we consumers feel the impact of these scenarios?

Starting June or July when it is harvest time. Fruits should be OK because they grow on trees and this year, the weather was favorable for them. Some types of vegetables will also not be affected at the consumer level because big growers had already stocked up on needed seeds and equipment. The problem will be with the small and medium farmers who constitute up to 50 percent of farmers in Lebanon. Their income will be reduced because of their decreased production.

How have you adapted your working environment in light of the government measures taken to reduce the spread of COVID-19?

We are having online meetings via Zoom with our line managers and sales engineers to keep business on track. We are trying to keep our warehouse open as much as possible.

We in the agriculture domain are used to work in uncertainty and difficult circumstances—because we work with nature which is unpredictable—and so we are trying to see what we can offer to mitigate this crisis so that Lebanon doesn’t face a food security problem down the line.

Anything you would like to share in that regard?

We are thinking of ideas that don’t need a lot of investment, since there is a financial problem these days. We are also thinking of how we can support people in planting in their own gardens, about what crops grow best in this scenario, especially for those that have homes in rural areas. We are using our online platforms to promote this idea, encouraging people to visit our nurseries to receive vegetable seedlings and grafted seedlings that are resistant to soil borne disease and climate change and produce more.  

When it comes to the farmers, we are trying to support them, regardless of whether they are paying us or not, so they can still plant on time. We also introduced crop varieties that are naturally resistant to diseases so they can decrease the usage of pesticides, if not enough quantities of that are available.

We are also promoting hydroponics, which is a way of planting that produces healthy clean produce with more yield and 90 percent less water and minimum fertilizers. A well-trained farmer or a new investor could seize this opportunity to meet consumer demands and improve the local market.

This interview is part of a wider report on food sufficiency and the food supply chain that Executive will be publishing in the coming weeks. It has been edited and condensed for clarity.

March 26, 2020 0 comments
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Watch: Coronavirus Facts vs Fiction — Interview with Infectious Diseases Specialist Ramzi Saliba (Part 1)

by Youmna Naufal March 25, 2020
written by Youmna Naufal

Ramzi Saliba, infectious disease expert and program manager in humanitarian and emergencies based in Canada, interviewed on what coronaviruses are and why we need to practice social distancing to help flatten the curve.

Interviewed by producer and host of Y Chats, Youmna Naufal.

March 25, 2020 0 comments
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Lebanon’s economy and industry suffer under coronavirus impact

by Thomas Schellen March 23, 2020
written by Thomas Schellen

When seeking to fathom how Lebanon’s pre-existing economic woes correlate to the newly unfolding global coronavirus recession, a first obstacle is posed by the extreme speed with which this recession is unfolding. In February, and even earlier in March, international agencies, leading economic powers, financial institutions, and noted economists assumed that the virus’s impact might be sharp or moderate but limited to the short term.

By the end of the second week in March, however, the tone of assessments had changed dramatically. Expectations of recessions in leading economies such as the United States now see a recovery starting in the fourth quarter of the year—in optimistic scenarios marked by a seasonal pattern with the first wave of coronavirus infections peaking this spring. Less hopeful scenarios see no resumption of GDP growth in corona-stricken G7 economies before the first quarter of next year, and some noted economists anticipate far worse, a deep recession of unpredictable length.

In a summary view, roughly three quarters of 41 Europe and US-based economists polled by Reuters in the third week of March said 2020 would see a global recession, and their sentiments reportedly grew still gloomier as the week progressed.  Where does this leave Lebanon, struggling already with an historic economic crisis of existential proportion?

Frontline sectors of the Lebanese economy with reliance on uninterrupted daily business—from the marginally self-employed and informal workers to general retail, luxury retail, hospitality ventures, and hotels—are unquestionably the immediate victims of the standstill of economic activity forced upon them by the necessary containment efforts to counter the threat of the COVID-19 epidemic in Lebanon.

Beyond this portion of the economy that is exposed to short-term impacts, however, the situation has turned so dire for the entire economy, and the Lebanese people as its stakeholders, that attempts to verbalize the disaster’s scope can only choose between metaphors in the superlative range. Is it more appropriate to compare the state of economy to being faced with a volcano eruption on top of an earthquake, or is it more fitting to liken it to a tsunami that follows just after the devastation of a monster hurricane?

Monster clouds over the country

Lebanese economists whom Executive reached by phone confirmed the impression, albeit in less dramatic words, that the country is undergoing a two-in-one crisis. While the implications are especially severe in terms of further increases of poverty and social destitution of the population, it also impairs the motors of hope that had existed (when taking into account that a resurgence of the hospitality industry and tourism has shifted considerably farther away, and that new complications in the financial markets also appear to push prospects of development there farther into the future).

“The coronavirus effect will be catastrophic on the world economy, and the Lebanese economic situation will be more and more catastrophic, amidst the halt of economic activity,” says economist Elie Yachoui, framing the picture in neutral words. But that phrasing makes his subsequent description of the economic outlook no less scary. “We can say that the middle class in Lebanon will be totally extinct. They will be the new poor,” he says.

In Yachoui’s perspective, the economic downturn will leave even the moderately well-off, those who have some savings in their accounts, in no advantaged state as they are not able to fully access those savings due to problems with banking and inability to obtain hard currency. He tells Executive that only the top 10 percent of the population may find themselves to be better off, those who have deposits in accounts outside of Lebanon.

A similar assessment is voiced by economist Roy Badaro, who notes that a recent World Bank warning about the poverty level in Lebanon increasing from 30 to 50 percent of the population under the country’s prior economic crisis may no longer be adequate for describing the scope of the malaise. “I expect an 80 percent poverty level,” he says. “Only 5 percent of families will be able to keep the same level of consumption, and another five percent or so will be okay—all the rest will suffer a lot.” According to Badaro, the scale of economic suffering will vary but the relative poor of today will become very poor, and a serious threat of starvation could surface in about three months’ time.

Notably, the exacerbating effect of coronavirus health crisis and economic recession is also affecting the country’s manufacturing industry, a major driver of the economy. Fady Gemayel, the president of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists (ALI), tells Executive: “It is indeed a very dramatic situation. We [industrialists] are all primarily concerned about public health and of the health of workers in industry and the whole [manufacturing] chain.” 

According to Gemayel, the immediate challenges, in addition to their human impact, have operational and economic dimensions. “We see that things are unfolding very dramatically as industry has been requested to limit their operations to basic sectors of food, pharmaceutical, necessary consumer product industries, and what is needed in the production of these products,” he explains.

New operational challenges affect manufacturing enterprises that can continue to work, he adds, because they have to take extra safety measures not only for their personnel but for all stakeholders involved in distribution of their products. “At the same time, there is a challenge as far as going ahead into the future as most [enterprises] are not working,” he says. “This poses serious [economic] problems because it [compounds on] the previous problems that we had. As if we needed that.”

Nuanced in the details and unseen opportunities

Despite this overall burden that the recessionary environment of the coronavirus puts on all industrial sectors, the picture turns more nuanced when delving deeper into industrial activity and subsectors of manufacturing. Some subsectors—namely those with a stake in the digital realm and orientation toward exporting their goods and services—are saying they see those silver linings on their horizons, even as they are hit by the coronavirus crisis in conjunction with the preexisting Lebanese economic crisis.

Multilane, a company with wholly export-centric profile as supplier of infrastructure components for the global data center market, has been affected by the coronavirus on levels of work flow and its international supply chain but has been able to cope with these impacts, CEO Fadi Daou tells Executive. “We are doing okay,” he says. “Everybody is, of course, working from home, not just here (at the Lebanese manufacturing site) but also in our global offices in the US etc. The company is still on a steady path.”

A challenge that Daou had to deal with specifically relates to the company’s reliance on an international supply chain. Generally, disruptions of work at factories—first in China’s Hubei province, then in manufacturing plants in South Korea, and finally in countries around the world—and disruptions of international shipping and cross-border transport. These disturbances notably represented an impediment that differentiated the downturn of the real economy triggered by the coronavirus pandemic from the financial upheavals that played the central role in earlier recessions, including the Great Recession of 2007-9.

“We are affected by global supply chain delays,” Daou says. “Much of our supply chain is sourced from southern China and some from Taiwan. That has been impacted.” What mitigated the disruption for Multilane, however, were two elements. The first such factor, according to Daou, was that the area of origin of supply for electronic components is centered in the southeast of China rather than the midwest, where the Hubei province, the most heavily affected by the virus, is located. Besides the better functioning of the supply chain on the Chinese end, the second factor aiding Multilane in its management of component supplies was its habit of maintaining some inventory because of the well-known vagaries of importing materials to Lebanon. “We do have one to two months delay in our supply chain,” he explains. “That could, of course, be increasing—and we would be impacted—but since we operate in Lebanon we typically don’t rely on [just-in-time] supply chain but keep two to three months buffer of material.” 

The deepest problems that Daou faced in terms of his international dealings actually occurred at the end of last year and were caused by the Lebanese economic crisis’ sudden restrictions on financial transfers via Lebanese banks. The problem was acute until the company could start to rely on inflows of fresh cash, meaning hard currency wired to its account after last October. “We did face some serious disadvantages when we were no longer able to pay our suppliers and our employees [in our offices abroad], so we lost quite a bit in the initial shock,” he says. “Banks did not give us three months to adjust and that was costly on our topline and our bottom line, which had a significant negative impact in the November/December time period of 2019. However, we recovered by January and we were able to shift some business outside the country.”

Another sector of industry to expect new opportunities are software companies that are currently anticipating a shift in corporate demand of local companies in favor of local suppliers, says Joe Hatem, CEO of Lebanese software house Profiles. The company has been in business for some four decades and is specialized in enterprise resource planning (ERP) software. “We are right now under the shock of the corona crisis but once the shock settles, the software industry has golden opportunities,” he says. “One because it is an industry that can export its services or its goods using very little imported material—mainly no imported materials at all.”

Secondly, in the domestic market, an effect of Lebanon’s economic crisis was that companies suddenly—due to the impossibility of making the requisite international transfers—ran into big problems with paying for software licenses from the international suppliers that dominate global markets. In this scenario, local beats global. “We suddenly become a better opportunity, because we are selling locally [and] cashing locally,” Hatem says. “Thus [software purchasers in Lebanon] can do better business with us than with imported software. I foresee that this will be a factor to give us a boost. What remains is for us to be aware of this and make good use of this opportunity. We are working on that.”

Hatem says it is a blessing for his company during the coronavirus-induced economic restrictions that “its work is digital” rather than dependent on physical production of goods and physical deliveries. Similarly to tech company Multilane, Profiles could quickly shift its engineers from coming to the office to working from home. The ability to service at least part of its client base remotely as well as being engaged in exports and receiving some payments in fresh money enabled Profiles to manage the coronavirus shock relatively well.

However, Hatem voices a grave concern that is of specific importance to his activity and industry. “The internet has become crucial more than ever,” he says.  “We can survive as far as dealing with banks even as things are slowing down. But if internet came to be in a situation of slow operation or no operation, everybody will be in trouble.”

This highlights how different industries with different specializations are exposed to singular bottlenecks and technical vulnerabilities, even if they are embedded in the digital economy. It furthermore illustrates how complex modern economic and social equations are, as a human or economic risk in one area of digital-era existence may have a less obvious tradeoff in another area.

According to Daou, online connectivity does not play as crucial a role for Multilane’s operations as it does for the software industry. Instead of focusing on short-term risks of higher internet consumption and resulting stresses on the existing infrastructure (some European countries saw a 10 percent increase in internet usage in just one week in March), he sees an opportunity in the fact that internet usage has been recently spiking. Providers of web conferencing, video streaming, and entertainment will, in the mid to long term, have to invest in their internet and data center infrastructure. “We don’t know how long this will take but we expect a very significant uptick in business activities,” Daou says.

Support or self-reliance?

One question where the industrialists interviewed by phone for this article were of one and the same mind was the issue of governmental support. Asked if they were looking for any fiscal assistance from the Lebanese state, something that would reflect even a small portion of the large fiscal and monetary relief packages that recently made news from governments in countries all over the world, they just laughed or sighed in exasperation. They all know too well how severe the financial limitations of the Lebanese state are, and how drained the coffers at the treasury and the central bank.  

Referring to what the Lebanese government should do, the Association of Industrialists’ president tells Executive that the government, at a minimum, needs to defer taxes to help mitigate the economic repercussions of the coronavirus pandemic, calling for a “lifeline for industry and for people.”

Gemayal continues, “I think the government should be very responsible in the sense of addressing the issues of dues to the public sector. What can they do with reference to this issue? [But also] there is a social issue that needs to be addressed, [and] a liquidity issue that needs to be addressed. How can the government [respond to these needs] and where can they bring funds from? I think it is necessary to solicit any specific aid from donor agencies that are not necessarily politically connoted.” 

He concedes that it will put Lebanese industry at a competitive disadvantage internationally if they cannot benefit from direct financial support measures from the public coffers, whereas enterprises in other countries receive sizeable fiscal support under very large rescue packages. This is not what is on his mind, however. “We are not here to complain that their situation is relatively better than that of Lebanese industries,” he says. “We are concerned with moving forward and meeting the challenges head on. We need to limit the damage and take advantage of available resources.”

One further point of concurrence among industrialists and economists interviewed in the early stage of the corona crisis in Lebanon was that the beginning of the solution to their dual conundrum and emerging existential recession lies in the realms of politics and changing attitudes. Now, more than ever, a rethink of economic strategy for the Lebanese economy is needed and this enormous task requires universal investments of mental effort by political and economic decision-makers without regard for partisan political concerns, exclusionary views, or special interests on national level or even beyond. The coronavirus crisis is global and thus prone to generate long-term changes that can be opportunities to rectify misaligned political and economic patterns. As Hatem puts it, “We need to reengineer our minds as well [as our strategy for finance and economy], and our relation with nature and with the Earth.”  

In this context of the overriding whole, the particular mood in the industrial camps of the Lebanese economy appears to be both defiant and desperate, but with an overall tendency of being determined to sustain industries against all odds in this two-in-one crisis of Lebanon’s mess and the global coronavirus recession. Even as he acknowledges that the pandemic is globally unique and that today’s obstacles to financing of raw materials similarly were never seen in Lebanon even in the days of the civil war, Gemayel says, “We do not want to give up. In Lebanon we have been through challenges in the past and lived up to them.”

March 23, 2020 0 comments
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Q&A with Fady Gemayel on the impact of the coronavirus crisis on Lebanon’s industry

by Thomas Schellen March 23, 2020
written by Thomas Schellen

To gauge the extent to which Lebanese manufacturing industry, an often overlooked but crucial driver of the economy, is being impacted by the current global coronavirus pandemic in conjunction with the previous difficulties in Lebanon, Executive conducted a phone interview with Fady Gemayel, president of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists.

How is Lebanese industry coping with the restrictions on economic activity that have been placed on the country? How serious is the situation for you and what measures were taken by the sector? 

It is indeed a very dramatic situation as [the response to the coronavirus] is affecting all the sectors of the economy. We are all primarily concerned about public health of everybody and of the health of workers in industry and the whole chain. We see that developments are unfolding very dramatically as industry has been requested to limit their operations to those basic sectors of food, pharmaceutical, and necessary consumer products, and what is needed in the production of these products. It is a big challenge even for those firms which can continue to work, because they have to take extra safety measures, be it for their personnel, [or] be it for all stakeholders involved in the distribution.

Does the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures seeking to contain and limit its spread pose a threat to the survival of industrial enterprises? 

There is a challenge going ahead as most [enterprises] are not working and this poses serious problems because it [compounds on] the previous problems that we had. As if we needed that. We are already in a big problem and face many challenges. The way ahead is challenging and we don’t know how long [this crisis] will take. Do we have a social responsibility to our workers, and how can we continue? It is okay if it is for a few days but how will it evolve if it continues? What will happen in general, not only in industry? How will daily workers or those who [rely on daily incomes] be affected? They have no revenue. How will they be able to sustain [their existence and their families]? Furthermore, the disturbance caused by the banking sector adds to the challenges. 

Are you requesting fiscal support for industry from the government or asking it to instigate relief measures such as credit support or easing of monetary conditions?

Deferring taxes I think is the minimum that is needed. For sure, the government should be very responsible in the sense of addressing the issues of dues to the public sector. [But also] there is a social issue that needs to be addressed, a liquidity issue that needs to be addressed. How can the government listen [to these needs] and where can they bring funds from? I think it is necessary to solicit any specific aid from donor agencies that are not necessarily politically connoted. Something should be done. There should be a lifeline for industry and for people. 

Besides the problems related to staying afloat financially, not being able to keep production running, and seeing demand weaken, companies in many countries face serious disruptions of their supply chains, especially when they are long and cross borders. Do manufacturers in Lebanon face significant problems with their supply chains?

We were already faced with the issue for the sake of getting the proper financing for getting raw materials. Now comes, in addition, the issue of corona. But I must say that we have been in close contact on this issue with the government and the central bank; [we were engaging with them] about the highly needed raw materials for those [manufacturers] that are producing corona-related materials. There will be some urgent measures that will allow the imports of needed raw materials. 

How about the supply chain scenario of your own company, to look at an example?

It is in corrugated materials. We supply packaging for companies in food and pharmaceutical, for detergents and such. So far we are able to cater to their needs, mind you that there are also paper companies in Lebanon. The issue [of our supply chains] is not related to corona but to the possibility of transferring funds for purchase of raw materials. This was preceding the corona issue and we are trying to find solutions. 

All industrialists have to face up to costs as they have fixed costs that they have to pay whether they are producing or not. This is a serious issue. In fact, the corona crisis is now for us two crises. It is a raw material crisis that is aggravated by the corona [crisis]. It is two-in-one. This is where we are now. 

News of large and previously almost unheard of governmental and central banking support packages are coming from numerous countries around the world. Are you concerned that the companies benefitting from such lavish support will have an added competitive advantage in global markets when compared with Lebanese manufacturers? 

We are not here to complain that their situation is relatively better than ours. We are concerned with moving forward and meeting the challenges head on. This is why we are saying that we have to find the ways in which we can have damage control. We need to limit the damage and take advantage of available resources. Industry is one of the drivers of the economy. You can imagine [for example] that we are short of many medical supplies that could have been made in Lebanon and that other countries now would not want to export as they reserve them for themselves as a priority. I hope this is a lesson for everybody for the future. 

Now is not the time to complain, though. What we are concerned with is having an emergency mechanism for facing up to the situation and doing all what it takes. For this, the government should revert to the international friends of Lebanon. The International Monetary Fund is a political issue, so let’s avoid that at this point in time. There are other agencies that are keen and that have been willing to help Lebanon. Already three months ago we, as Association of Lebanese Industrialists, approached such institutions. As the banking system was not performing, we were telling them that we needed a lifeline solution. This is what I am talking about. 

Do you think that France, for example, is in a position to help Lebanon at this time and specifically Lebanese industry?

I don’t want to narrow the scope to any particular country. France, Europe [collectively], and other countries have always been close to the Lebanese people and would not shy away from their responsibilities in this most difficult moment. Don’t forget that we have three problems in one: We have the issue of the Lebanese, the issue of the refugees, and the issue of the Palestinians. We are assuming [responsibility] for all of them and should not be left alone.

As the industrialists’ association, do you have a vision and determination on how to grapple with all these compounded crises? 

I want to assure you that we believe that Lebanese industry is called to play a better role in the economy in the future. We do not want to give up. In Lebanon we have been through challenges in the past and lived up to them. Although this one is unusual—the corona is worldwide unusual—and also the [previous crisis] of the need [to find finance] for getting raw materials was also unseen in the past in Lebanon. During the most vicious days of the war and those times, we never did have to think about inability to get raw materials, as it is now. It is a unique challenge.  

March 23, 2020 0 comments
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LAU study on COVID-19 spread estimates extreme social distancing could save 150,000 lives

by Nabila Rahhal March 20, 2020
written by Nabila Rahhal

On March 19, the Office of Graduate Studies and Research at the Lebanese American University (LAU) released the results of a study (see below) on the effects of different levels of social distancing on the number of COVID-19 related deaths by June in Lebanon. One note of caution for these figures is that the lack of data and predictive model used means these results are speculative, based on an analysis of trends. Though the team behind them did consult with LAU’s infectious disease unit when modeling the scenarios—and there are plans for collaboration across disciplines and universities in the future on the effects of COVID-19 on Lebanon—at the time of writing data is lacking. There is also a high likelihood that the number of cases in the country are above the official count, according to the researcher behind the study, Samer Saab, interim dean of graduate studies and research at LAU. He told Executive that the numbers he has produced, if anything, could be considered a conservative estimate, given the trends being witnessed in countries such as Italy (see Q&A below). The primary purpose of the study, he says, was to raise awareness among the public and policy-makers of the effects of social distancing and to underline that this situation would not be over in the short term.

LAU Coronavirus & Social Distancing Study

Forecast of the daily number of infected cases and daily recoveries due to the new Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Lebanon (Graph 1). The forecast is projected in a window of 112 days, beginning with March 19 and ending by end of June 2020 for three scenarios under consideration:

FREE-FOR-ALL: No social distancing measures are followed, and normal life is assumed;

MODERATE DISTANCING: 1 out of every 4 people moves freely or resumes normal life;

EXTENSIVE DISTANCING: 1 out of every 8 people moves freely or resumes normal life. Forecast of the daily number of deaths (Graph 2).

The forecast is based on time-series analysis and uses the data before March 19 to predict the number of recoveries. The employed model assumes an initial death rate of 3% of the total identified cases, which increases to 6% once the total number of critical cases requiring intensive care exceeds 250 patients. The latter reflects the limitations of the healthcare system. The forecasted results do not consider confounding factors (such as lifestyle, environmental factors, consanguinity, etc.); however, the model is applied to Wuhan reported data and is shown to closely capture its trends. 

Source: LAU’s Facebook page.

Executive spoke over the phone with Samer Saab, interim dean of graduate studies and research and professor of electrical engineering at LAU, to learn more about the findings of the study, its limitations, and its implications.

Can you please briefly describe the study?

These are projected or forecasted numbers where I am looking at the trends; it is not exact science. I put forward three scenarios: if everyone will go out [the free-for-all scenario], if one in four people go out [the moderate distancing scenario], and finally if only one in eight people go out [the extensive distancing scenario].

The free-for-all scenario is where people decide to live their lives normally. If we had had an infinite capacity of hospital beds and intensive care units, then we would have a 3 percent death rate [under this scenario] but we don’t have that.

I am assuming that when the number of infected people who need treatment in intensive care units (which is typically 10 percent of those infected) goes beyond 250, then the death rate would be 6 percent [due to the lack of treatment for COVID-19 and assuming that some hospital beds will be needed for other urgent cases].

How did you arrive at 250 persons as the tipping point?

This is an estimate, based on what we hear about many of the hospitals not being prepared. If I change it a bit here and there, it is not going to change the numbers a lot. It’s more to give an idea.

The advantage of the free-for-all scenario is that after June/July, you don’t have to wait for a treatment to be developed because most people would have been infected and those who survived would likely develop immunity—though at this stage there are still many unknowns, like if the virus will be seasonal. Many governments initially tried to follow this scenario, as it would have the least impact on the economy with people able to work freely. Thinking has changed, however, as seen by recent measures in the UK to shut down schools despite initial resistance. The disadvantage of the free-for-all scenario is simple: Many people will die and health care systems will become overrun.

Whereas in the second and third scenario, if we maintain distancing until June/July, then it is possible that a treatment would have been developed and would be accessible to most people. If they get the virus then, they would be able to take medication and not suffer as much.

So this is the message we are trying to send to people: Please stay home and let us buy time. We are also trying to send a message to the decision-makers so that they don’t think that we will be able to open schools and universities and basically go back to normal in the next two weeks.

What’s the methodology used for this study? What model are you basing it on?

I used time-series statistical analysis [to mark data trends over time]. However, it is not straightforward like a typical time-series: Whenever more people get infected, the rate of spreading becomes lower and lower. In urban areas—which is the case for Lebanon as most of us live in urban areas—each person can infect three people, while in the rural areas  the rate is less (1.5 persons). But at the end, it doesn’t matter much because it only affects how fast we will reach the peak and not the figures themselves.

But, there are a lot of factors I didn’t take into consideration. A lot of people will still go to work or go out if their family is relying on them to not go hungry, right?

How feasible do you think it is, both psychologically and economically, to practice extreme social distancing until June?

Excellent point. I cannot answer this question but I feel there are positive vibes and people are helping each other; they will not let people starve. But there will be bilateral damages, such as to the economy.

Still, 153,885 deaths in the free-for-all scenario versus 454 in the extensive distancing one is no joking matter. If our hospitals are overwhelmed, then our doctors will have to play God and decide who dies or not, which is catastrophic.

Were you able to account for the issue of under testing and potential under reporting in Lebanon in the study?

Because we are publishing under the name of the Lebanese American University of Beirut, we had to rely on the official data reported by the government.

However, what would change—if we assume that there are more cases than what is reported—is the date of the peak. We would reach the peak faster if we had more cases than what is reported.

What are the limitations of the study?

As I said before, there are many assumptions I had to take. The methodology I used does not take into account environmental or lifestyle factors, which could mean that more people don’t comply with distancing. The psychology factor is also important here: Will people stay home until June? They will probably cheat. People think the second case scenario is reasonable or doable (in terms of quarantine measures) but 4,259 people would still die in it and that is a big number.

We don’t know much about the virus and there are many unknown factors related to it so we need to stay at home and be patient. This outbreak is not going to end soon and the worst is yet to come. We need to buy time to learn more about the virus so less people will die.

This interview has been edited for clarity.

March 20, 2020 0 comments
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WATCH: Coronavirus Facts vs Fiction — Interview with Dr Sharara on COVID-19 & children

by Youmna Naufal March 20, 2020
written by Youmna Naufal

Pediatrician at the AUB medical center, Dr. Rana Sharara, answers all your questions when it comes to #COVID-19 and children.

Interviewed by producer and host of Y Chats, Youmna Naufal.

March 20, 2020 0 comments
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Lebanese turn to distance learning amid coronavirus disruptions

by Eva Hashem March 19, 2020
written by Eva Hashem

We are in the midst of a global pandemic. The novel coronavirus that has swept across the globe is having far reaching ramifications for our health systems and for the global economy. For Lebanese students, though among the demographic least likely to suffer severe health consequences from contracting COVID-19, the impact has been immediate and detrimental to a school year already besought with difficulties. Some institutions in Lebanon had sent students home before the Ministry of Education and Higher Education made the decision to close schools and universities on February 28 until March 9, a decision that has since been expanded into a country-wide lockdown until March 29. Lebanese students who were already in catch-up mode from the school disruptions at the height of the protests last year are now facing further disruptions, cancelled exams, and increasingly uncertain futures. 

This crisis requires drastic measures. In order to slow the spread of the virus and flatten the curve (keeping cases at a manageable level so not to overwhelm healthcare systems) the Lebanese government has asked Lebanese to stay at home where possible. But these measures, while necessary, are also creating a crisis for our education system. Questions administers, teachers, students, and parents are now facing are those over the fate of this academic year, of standardized tests, and of the viability of our current education system in the long run should pandemics such as COVID-19 become more frequent occurrences.

Comparatively speaking, Lebanese schools and universities have reacted quickly to this crisis and the need to ensure that students continue to learn and progress from home. The answer, at least as a short term measure to ensure continuity and stability in Lebanese education for all learners amid limited resources, was distance learning. Across Lebanon, stakeholders and school and university directors have instructed their teaching staff (supervisors, coordinators, and instructors) to swiftly activate an online learning system to connect institutions to parents and students through educational platforms.

Several platforms have been adopted to ensure pedagogical follow up with students and minimize the disruption to their learning. Among them are: Google Classroom, a free web service that allows teachers and students to easily share teaching materials and teachers to continue grading students work; Zoom, a remote conferencing service that is being adapted by teachers to act as virtual classrooms; PRONOTE, an online system that links the school to the parents through a platform called KNED, which is being used by schools under the Institut Français du Liban umbrella; and ELearning, an app that allows for active learning through voiceover recordings or through use of Microsoft Teams and BBB (BigBlueButton), a communication and collaboration platform and an open source web conferencing system respectively.

Moving classes to an online, distance learning model was an immediate remedial solution to potentially long lasting problem, but it was not a universal solution. While many schools and universities have the capacity to teach students through remote learning, others do not, particularly less advantaged schools that are in remote areas with limited internet access or those experiencing severe financial restraints. Some schools simply do not have the technological capacity to adopt this model, others suffer from a shortage of resources (financial and staff) that compromises technological ones. Others still are currently working on building platforms that will be able to handle all lessons until the crisis is contained.

Another barrier to offering courses online is the scarcity of instructors who are trained in distance teaching and learning. Educational institutions did not foresee this crisis and so did not provide the adequate professional development to their instructors. This might come as a wakeup call to those who still believe that traditional methods of teaching are the one and only way to transmit knowledge.

Even when students have the means to connect online, sometimes you can have thousands of students trying to connect to a school or university’s system at the same time, crashing the server and preventing access to lessons. Other students may find connecting to the internet difficult or impossible,  especially if they live in a region that is facing several crises at the economic and health levels.

Increasing the bandwidth is paramount, but difficult in a country like Lebanon where connection speeds are notoriously slow. The Lebanese government did announce that it was planning to double the speed of the internet as well as the capacity of consumption for internet service subscribers with the official Ogero network until April to encourage people to work from home. This is a good first step, but many Lebanese are not subscribed to Ogero.

Given the economic and financial crises that the Lebanese were facing prior to the coronavirus outbreak, is it even feasible to expect the government, blogged down as it is in its competing priorities, to open lines of access for students to compensate their inability to attend schools and universities. Is it capable of allocating budgets for training and equipment to less advantaged schools and universities who cannot cope with moving to an online model?

Holy Spirit University of Kaslik (USEK) launched a campaign on March 18 calling for all students to have access to free 4G internet to help with online learning amid this nation lockdown. On its Facebook page it posted: “‪Facing the huge difficulties of online teaching due to slow and interrupted Internet connection, free unlimited mobile data bundles for online teaching and e-learning tools are highly needed for all Lebanese students in these times of crisis.” The university is encouraging other educational institutions to back this campaign and has launched the #4G4education hashtag.

At the home level, not all parents have the capacity to encourage online learning for their children. Perhaps they do not have the means or the knowledge to help them to connect online. In these circumstances, relying on tutoring or on the help of relatives and neighbors who are more tech savvy is key, though increasingly difficult given measures to keep Lebanese at home where possible.

Can technology save what’s left of the academic year?

Distance learning is the best system we can adopt given the circumstances we currently face. It is possible, if adopted to the best of our abilities, that this model could help rescue what is left of the current school year. If, and assuming they will, schools and universities reopen and immediately put in place a summative assessment that would give them a reliable idea of what their students have grasped through distance learning. In the meantime, online instruction needs specific monitoring to insure its efficiency and equity toward all learners. Control should be implemented first on the level of the school/university administration, then at the level of supervisors, coordinators and finally instructors. Some schools in Lebanon have set a specific tracking time for online activities to monitor the interaction of teachers and learners. For example, the Elearning app used at USEK is tracking who is connected and who is not.

Teachers and lecturers should also be aware of compensation inflation and avoid overloading students with work as a reaction to the new distance learning method. We are not in a race here. We are in survival mode, where quality matters more than quantity to insure a good grasp of the subjects on the learners’ part and also to avoid exhaustion on the instructors’ part, who are familiarizing themselves with the world of distance learning. It is true that almost anything can be taught online, but teachers must ensure that concepts have been properly explained and mastered before inundating students with exercises and activities.

Emergency situations require emergency measures, such as alleviating the curriculum of supplemental information without jeopardizing the quality of instruction. What is crucial now, is to make sure to vary activities to keep distance learners motivated. Similarly, when schools reopen, we must implement a solid revision of concepts covered online to ensure proper knowledge acquisition.

This crisis has placed educators in charge of curriculum design and strategic planning, forcing us to rethink our teaching strategies and encouraging us to be selective by providing our learners with the type of information that is absolutely critical to have. In the long term, we should be asking ourselves why this is not common practice all year round, crisis or not, to lift up the load of unnecessary information off the shoulders of our young students.

If we look at the spread of coronavirus from a purely health perspective, it is true that the elderly and those with underlying conditions are the most at risk. But there are impacts beyond health, and unless we preserve a sound education system it will be detrimental to the well-being of all our children. We have to protect the right and access to education for our future generations. This should be the main concern of educators.

The key issue here is to know how to adapt to the crisis, to a new mode of teaching and learning. This crisis could be an opportunity to help us achieve a 21st century profile for our learners (a well rounded, critical thinker, problem solver, and creative). The ultimate goal is to reset our educational priorities by offering our learners only what is pedagogically sound to help them face 21st century challenges with the power that comes from knowledge.

March 19, 2020 0 comments
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Coronavirus AnalysisEconomics & PolicyOpinionSpecial Report

How corona could fulfill a long-held economic worry

by Thomas Schellen March 12, 2020
written by Thomas Schellen

At the time of writing (March 12) the number of known coronavirus infections had exceeded 126,000 and that the death toll was above 4,600 persons. Governments around the world have dedicated increasing medical, social, humanitarian, and financial resources toward bringing the threatening virus under control. At the same time, worries over the economic impact of the global pandemic have geared up to the point when the metaphor of a black swan (an outlier or rare financial crisis) has been employed by some financial experts. 

In terms of what (rather than a black swan) might more neutrally be dubbed a combination of a pandemic and potential global recession, companies around the world are showing impacts, from manufacturers in China and South Korea to the internet giants on the west coast of the US, and banks and financial firms in New York and London. The latest new and massive disruption to the world economy by March 12 was an announcement by US President Donald Trump that passenger travel from Europe would be severely restricted. With equity markets tumbling further as the second week of March got underway, it was impossible to estimate where the corona fall would reach its bottom. Publicly traded companies in developed markets saw the share prices drop in broad ranges, led downward by listed tourism and travel companies, such as airlines and cruise operators but also event management companies. Travel and tourism companies, listed or not, anywhere in the world concomitantly experienced weakened demand besides falling market valuations.  

Thus potentials for drastic contractions of business in countries heavily affected by the coronavirus outbreaks, such as China and South Korea, are emerging in tandem with a parallel contraction of global business. According to customs data released in China last month, exports fell by 17.2 percent and imports fell by 4 percent for the first two months in 2020 when compared with January and February of 2019. Expectations cited in media went as far as speculating on economic growth dropping to as low as 2 percent in the first quarter of 2020, compared with 6 percent growth in Q1 2019. The associated temporary stoppages of corporate activity have, moreover, been estimated to deny the global economy supplies of components of up to 50 billion dollars just in the month of February.  

Among major European economies, industrialists in Germany expect a continued recession in their sector. The manufacturers’ association Bund Deutscher Industrie, which already had to deal for the last six quarters with contracting production, said recently that it expects German industries to be stuck in recession throughout 2020, attributing this assessment not to political factors such as trade conflicts with the United States but to the global spread of the coronavirus and its economic implications. In the same vein, financial analysts in Italy have uttered expectations of a national recession in 2020. In Britain, expectations are for a stagnation in the first and contraction in the second quarter, while analysts in France also expect a recessionary development. On the bottom line of global economic expectations, economists in Germany, the UK, the US, Japan, and other G7 countries were speculating about a prolonged global recession engulfing OECD countries, with minor economic powers and small countries likely to be dragged along for a bad ride. 

Recession, recession everywhere 

The idea of a recession is deeply embedded in the mind of the average economist. This is to say, academic economists theorizing about cycles of expansion and contraction have been wedded to such concepts for at least a hundred years, since research of business cycles by scions of the profession—persons such as Nikolai Kondratieff, Wesley Mitchell, Arthur Burns, Simon Kuznets, and Joseph Schumpeter—elevated business cycle theories into international economic orthodoxy. Of course, cultural knowledge of multi-year economic cycles is much older. The central academic temple with air of quasi-religious authority on business cycles in the US, and with it expectations of recessions, is the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), which regularly surveys large numbers of economists what their expectations are in this regard.  

Last year, around the middle of 2019, NBER surveys showed a heightened predilection of economists to expect a recession—but basically a garden-variety one, nothing undue or severe—to hit the US at some point in 2020, most probably toward the year’s end. By reckoning of many economists later in 2019, however, the onset of a recession in 2020 seemed counter intuitive to the upbeat economic sentiment that was prevailing then—when the mood was once again shifting to increased optimism over the good performance of US stock markets and promising data on economic trends in production and employment.  

But in the first quarter of 2020, widespread expectations of a recession could not come as total emotional shock, especially taking into account not only data on the economy but considering external impacts such as a natural catastrophe, including an epidemic. Catastrophes or wars have long been understood to constitute potential triggers for a contraction and alteration of the business cycle, which in itself is not predictable in terms of its periodicity of shifting between expansions and contractions.  

(By the definition of the NBER a recession does not consist of two or more not consecutive quarters of linear GDP contraction but rather the period between the top of a business cycle and its trough, consisting of “a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy” that lasts for more than a few months and is usually reflected by developments of real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales.)

Still, it is noteworthy that global moods have been fluctuating from initial optimism over abilities of markets to rebound and continue their long, slow expansion of the past ten years (the beginning of the latest expansion period in the US economy according to NBER was in June 2009) to concerns over a prolonged global economic downturn, or recession. This recession may now be spreading from large producer countries in East Asia, due to skyrocketing fears of epidemics in previously complacent “advanced” societies at the top of the global wealth roster of high GDP, plus nervous financial markets in the US, Europe, and Asia. Although central banks are responding across developed economies, many observers concur that the banks’ capacities to soften the corona impact may be minor, due to generally challenging monetary environments that stand against intervention capacities of these banks.  

The virulent trigger 

The trigger for all this involves the coronavirus, which, although far from being lethal in direction of an extinction level event in the manner of a scientific horror movie, was discovered to be highly infectious and capable of spreading despite immense efforts of containment by quarantining entire provinces and metropolises. Surrounded by a combination of justified medical concerns and an “infodemic” (a term used by the World Health Organization) entailing unwarranted panics, uncontrollable online rumor mongering, and outpourings of criminal energy by some who seek to cash in on those rumors and fears, the virus outbreak’s impact on economic activity negates some recent signs of recovering national strengths—such as the improvements in the US economy, moderate growth in China and, albeit feeble, post-Brexit optimism in the UK.  

But even more concerning might be the impact on countries that in the current global GDP growth scenarios have already been marked by worrying signs of debt, anemic growth, unemployment, or recession. These run from weak economies in emerging markets like India, Brazil, and Turkey to political troubles in Iran, Iraq, and a number of developing and least developed countries under autocratic rule. Added to those are economic upheavals driven by social inequality and dissatisfaction in Chile and Hong Kong, next to deep troubles of economies in hotspots of inflation and debt like Argentina, Zimbabwe, Venezuela, and as of last year, Lebanon.  

Disease is a scourge of humanity, no question about it, and new infectious diseases carry with them a combination of new health risks and even greater fears. This was the unmistakable case with the coronavirus epidemics and its races around the world in the first quarter of 2020. Still, the question remains puzzling: Why or how would a virus with the number of confirmed infections in the tens of thousands versus a global population estimated at 7.8 billion and the mortality rate—except for the highly aged—residing in the single percentage digits produce recessions that affect numerous countries?  

Peculiar anatomy of the corona recession 

Economically speaking, there are at least five downturn factors to the development of the coronavirus recession, which will affect individual economies, regional economic blocks, and the global economy. In a headline capture, these factors relate to both the real economy, and there specifically also to globalization, as well as the financial markets. This is an unusual pairing of factors when one considers that most of the notorious recessions of the past century were related to either speculation or brought on by financial crises.  

In a more detailed tally, the multi-faceted factors that are fueling the corona recession, imply that it will be a potentially large and severe economic downturn—comparable in the words of some analysts to the Great Recession of 2008/9. These factors appear to entail the impact of the disease: preventive and cautionary measures on productive people and reduction of their full ability to work; supply chain disruptions; challenges to finances and debt situations of corporations, medium and small businesses; upheavals in equity markets; and some divergent developments in the sector with an overweight on sectors exposed to contractionary impulses versus sectors that are likely to realize gains from producing goods or services that see an increase in demand due to the virus.     

To be still more detailed, the first and most direct response to the comprehension of a new and highly infectious respiratory virus (other than momentary stonewalling by Chinese and later Iranian bureaucrats against full acknowledgement of the dangers related to the coronavirus) affected people and their workplaces. Swathes of people—in case of China, millions in Wuhan, a mega-metropolis of ten million people, plus in the surrounding Hubei province with a total population of nearly 50 more million—were sent into lock down quarantines. Demonstrating the rapidity of change in political responses and issuance of quarantines was the example of Italy, where a declaration of restrictions on northern provinces were expanded into nationwide measures. Responses and containment attempts furthermore multiplied in form of restrictions of cross-border travel into countries bordering heavily affected areas. In a side note, in the second week of March new infections in Hubei province were associated with travelers coming from Italy and Iran, hinting at the double possibility that the spread of the virus in the original hot zone of infections is slowing while infected persons now are found among those coming back from countries with subsequent infection waves.  

With workers asked to stay in home quarantines and movements of individuals being restricted, affected workplaces from factories in Wuhan and manufacturing plants in South Korea to a corporate office in Bavaria to Microsoft and Google sites in Seattle to churches, cultural attractions, universities, and bank offices in northern Italy had to implement closures that ranged from hours (for disinfection) to weeks of unscheduled vacations or home office work, with varying and not small concomitant results for employee productivity. Within weeks, these epidemically induced reductions in work and productivity spread around the world.      

While theoretically of limited economic impact under the temporal nature of such extreme measures, the reduction of work productivity extending into several weeks and perhaps even the major portion of a quarter has repercussions on output that reverberate for many additional weeks or even months by impacting production and sales of goods.    

A related and actually more severe economic impact to follow these local restrictions on manufacturing became visible in form of supply chain disruptions, as globally interdependent factories faced shortages of vital components in their productions even if they themselves were not affected in form of having to keep employees at home. Supply chain disruptions in the globalized economy generated ripple effects of inabilities to maintain production at desired levels across multiple countries due to non-deliveries of parts and components under supply chains that have grown to unprecedented length, complexity and—as is visible now—vulnerability. Thus supply chain disruptions caused by non-concurrent corona production outages and transportation problems have impacted globally industries from mobile phone producers to vehicle manufacturers to the point that some industry leaders in developed economies started advocating against hasty abandoning of cost-saving lengthy supply chains. 

The supply chain disruptions at multinational corporations as well as emergence of bottlenecks in industries that affected smaller enterprises translated quickly into financial problems ranging from payments of suppliers to servicing loans and credit lines by the affected companies, which in turn sent central banks and fiscal policy-makers into overdrive of initiating monetary and fiscal measures from reduction in the prime interest rates by the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Canada, and likewise steps by the Bank of England, to releasing of special credit facilities and billions of dollars in emergency measures and financial relief such as tax holidays for affected companies across countries, beginning with China where the People’s Bank of China initiated support for the local economy with a February 2 announcement that it would perform reverse repurchase operations worth 1.2 trillion yuan renminbi ($173 billion), alongside other financial relief operations mounted on local to national levels. Other countries to pass or  say they contemplate fiscal measures to date include the US (an $8.3 billion package was adopted in Congress, of which $3.1 billion were earmarked to the federal department of health and human services), Japan, the UK, Australia, the European Central Bank (the ECB is expected to proclaim stimulus measures on March 13) and various EU countries. In Hong Kong measures even extended to provision of cash payments to residents (known as Santa Claus or helicopter money) in hope of creating economic stimuli that would balance Hong Kong’s losses of economic activity due to demonstrations and now health-related reductions or absences of consumption.  

Correlated to the real economy’s sufferings were not only financing difficulties but also significant falls in equity markets. Seeing both economy-wide contractions in equity price or many companies and double-digit drops of stock market indices, billions could be lost in market capitalizations. After an upbeat mood early in 2020, markets dropped from February highs in the developed world and saw trillions of dollars wiped away from the global equation of wealth and corporate valuation in the first part of March. These losses in turn—under the concept of equity prices being key drivers of corporate investments into production, facilities and labor—spell trouble in form of negatively impacting willingness to invest by the listed companies, as well as signal possible reticence of households to consume.  

Finally, but also importantly, in specific sectors, recessionary impacts became visible immediately. Also reflected in their market capitalization and share prices, large airlines and tourism economy players from hotels to cruise companies saw dropping demand, facing the need to revise flight schedules and frequencies as well as reduce their capacities that they had allocated for expected levels of corporate and leisure travel in 2020 that will not be fulfilled. Hospitality enterprises from multinational holiday operators to SME-sized restaurants likewise were forced to revise their expectations that usually can count on office workers on lunch break or on Chinese tourists visiting the sites from Bali and Macau to Sydney, San Francisco, Paris, Rome, and London. Event organizers from large international trade exhibitions and conferences to cultural happenings and sports events had to cancel activities planned for the month of March and April and uncertainty has even risen over the staging of the multi-trillion dollar global sports spectacle of the 2020 Olympic Games, which are planned to be staged in Tokyo, Japan.       

One can expect some business to also derive increases in demand due to the coronavirus eruption and a few to capitalize on the fears that relate to the new health threat. In the latter category, shady communications outfits and providers of useless and fear-driven goods or services will reap criminal revenues. On the side of respectable services, some remote services—from home schooling and online tutoring to delivery services for daily consumables—will likely benefit in varying degrees (some of the added gains might be counterbalanced by higher cost of sick leaves) but this will not affect the economic equation enough to provide an equilibrium to the downturns of tourism, travel, conferencing, event, and hospitality services. This inability of balancing losses with new windfall gains must be expected, especially if the trade-offs between higher demand for some manufactured goods such as home entertainment, medical devices manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, healthcare services, and preventive disinfectant and protective supplies providers are counter-weighted against weakened demand for cars, smartphones, restaurant supplies, airplanes, oil and other commodities, and reduced production capacities due to supply chain disruptions.  

Long-term effects and concerns 

Whatever can be expected to disrupt the global economy in upcoming quarters in form of the usual suspects—whether trade disputes, inequities brought on by neoliberal fixations, nationalism and populism nourished by social fears, parochial sentiment or even patriotic ambitions, economic fallout from the need to mitigate climate change, elections, selfish politics, and now the corona recession—the detrimental or difficult-to-mitigate impacts can hardly be estimated as far as key national economies and global interrelations at a point when even the impact of a corona recession in the first half of 2020 might be felt globally for an unforeseeable number of months.  

Furthermore, it seem far from inconceivable that the economic impact of the coronavirus outbreak, as well as any other recession scenario that may play out across multiple countries in the coming months, could be damaging to aspirations of achieving crucial social goals such as the sustainable development goals. Such follow-on problems from the fight against hunger and poverty to the long-term battle to improve control of diseases could affect the global poor more than—as of this writing—the coronavirus’s hard impact in terms of increased mortality rates in even the most severely affected societies.  

Many of history’s more notorious recessions—among the overall immeasurable number of sectoral, national, and transnational recessions since the enigmatic agrarian revolution of multi-millesimal age or even since the first industrial revolution some four centuries ago—were rooted in speculation (such as the famous tulip mania) or in finance and the overbuilding of asset values in “bubbles”—such as asset bubbles involved in the knickerbocker trust recession over a century ago, the 1997 recession in southeast Asia or the “subprime” real estate bubble in the United States between the early 2000s and the bursting of this bubble in 2007/9.  

As such, many noted recessions began in the financial world. By contrast, the corona recession of 2020 seems to involve factors in the real economy of production and repercussions to globalization and the complexification and extensions of supply chains thereunder alongside with financial elements involving buildup of corporate debt and equity asset bubbles on stock exchanges. This might then justify seeing the corona recession as an outlier to the usual recessions with an extreme impact that could transcend or be qualitatively different to recessions related to classical boom-bust swings or overheating asset prices.  

In longer-term outcomes and structural ramifications, a global corona recession starting in 2020 and extending for who knows how many quarters could lead companies and countries to rethink some supply chain aspects and result in shortening of these chains; it could take some of the heat out of tourism markets that had been stoked by China’s travel hunger that rose in parallel to the country’s wealth increases. It could exacerbate nationalist economic orientations and populist fear responses to alien cultures.  

However, taking trends and behavior patterns of people under more careful consideration, it is at the same time almost unimaginable that a corona recession, even if severe, could radically dial down globalization and supply chain interconnections, international lust for foreign travel and tourism, or clamp cultural exchanges shut. Shorter term ramifications for some of these activities—which correspond to human desires for cheaper and better goods, fun and discovery of the stranger—will be their minor adjustments, plus economic repercussions that will hit some companies, industries, and countries which are overextended and candidates for capitalism’s creative destruction.  

However, in the scouting of economic horizons and the possibility of further unexpected disruptions of economic life, additional factors may have to be considered. As human interaction with planetary environmental factors is both intensifying and lacking in responsiveness, the future is likely to experience new contributing factors to economic recession arising from natural catastrophes, including recurrent patterns of sudden epidemics and the impacts of climate change. The insurance industry—led by the European behemoths in the reinsurance business—already started worrying years ago about the accumulation of risks in coastal regions around the world that have been candidates for heavy impacts of feared rise in sea levels.  

Aggregation of risks in scenarios where increasing urbanization and continuing globalization of supply chains and integration or interdependence of financial markets and real economies are driving forces, appear logical in the continuation of global integration and concentration of economic and financial power, market dominances, and corporate wealth that is not mitigated by redistribution and diversification efforts.  

Moreover, just as intensifying business cycles of indeterminate duration but relentless economic interwoven-ness might be on the horizons, the cultural cycles of exposure to epidemics under conditions of ever increasing competition for overlapping living environments of animals and the human species are to be considered. Over the past few decades, hunting of—protected or not—wildlife as well as the exploitation of domesticated animals such as cattle and chicken have been associated with formation of viruses and outbreaks of new diseases. Such epidemics seem to recur in cultural biological cycles that correspond to expansions and contractions of concern over self-protection, regulatory controls, and enforcement of veterinary standards—which gives every reason to speculate that such epidemic cycles will also in future be observed and contribute to economic recessions.

The figures for coronavirus in this piece were accurate as of March 12. As it is an ongoing situation these numbers will rise.

March 12, 2020 0 comments
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