Obviously there’s a lot of potential answers to this and it’s hard to comprehensive. That’s okay. The goal is to make incremental progress on the broad topic and identify specific points that would benefit from further research.
Note: These questions are intended to provoke more babble than prune. But even the babbliest thing should be presented such that other people can build on it. So if you have a prediction, share the reasoning or data behind it as well.
Note 2: This question has more potential to get political than most. I’m not going to disallow that, because the political process is crucial to what’s going to happen in the next few months, but please tread very very carefully, and I’m going to be fairly aggressive at curbing potential demon threads.
Note 3/31/2020: Renamed from “What will the economic effects of a 3 week quarantine be? 3 months?” to current title, which better reflects how we were treating it.
Here’s my rough sketch of what might happen to large manufacturing companies due to shutdowns within the supply chain.
Costs of other people’s shutdowns
Different countries / companies are likely to have different shutdown periods.
Supply chains are highly international so shutdowns in one country have huge knock-on effects. Most companies will aim to be dual sourced on critical components which require long qualification periods but this isn’t always simple. Even if dual sourced, bringing up the second source to cover the loss from the other won’t happen overnight, if at all.
For instance, say you buy a critical component from Italy. It’s dual sourced but on an 80:20 ratio so if Italy shuts down then your the potential output drops by 80%.
In reality stock levels will often sit at 30 days so for a shorter shutdown there is some slack. However, 30 days is an average. With enough different components you’re likely to be low-ish on stock for at least a couple of components and may be forced to drop output.
The other side of this is customers. Some customers will shut their production lines, others stay open. If your product in fairly homogenous this might be fine and match your incoming component levels. With a wider product range you may find that your supply line fails in the place where you most need the components.
The above will apply to a lesser extent where companies have to slow production.
Cost of your shutdown
Whilst you’re shut down you aren’t producing anything. This obviously has the direct impact of reducing turnover to 0 for however long you’re closed. This is almost certainly the biggest impact. If the government steps in to cover this (at least partly, e.g. the UK government will pay 80% of wages) then large manufacturers shouldn’t have an issue. Even if they have a temporary cash flow problem, the banks are likely to step in to help out.
Costs like renting the space that you’re in might still need to be paid. However if you’re struggling then whoever you’re renting off doesn’t really have the option to rent out to someone else in the short term so there may be some renegotiating being done (I’m less confident about this point—I’m not sure how the contracts would work out).
When you shutdown you probably already have lots of goods on their way to you by sea. My guess is that if possible people will try to get these accepted into the factory although I know some deliveries are being turned away if they have come through a high risk country.
When you reopen, everything will be a mess and the first week will be chaos (although with people working from home maybe this can be minimised with good planning). For a month or so things will be a bit muddled so efficiency won’t be optimal.
You’ll have some customers chasing you to get product immediately. I guess there’ll be a huge demand for airfreight—maybe this is how the airlines can recuperate some of their losses?
There may need to be some working with customers and suppliers on contractual terms of payment etc. In normal circumstances these are very tightly controlled but I would anticipate that most companies will be able to take the practical approach and overcome the bureaucracy which is inherent in such negotiations, due to the exceptional circumstances. Companies which are unable/unwilling to do this are likely to suffer additional damage.
Smaller companies
The above mostly applies to smaller manufacturers but to a lesser degree.
They are likely to be lower on the list of priorities for banks to sort out emergency loans which could cause a number to go out of business. This may be the target of additional government intervention.
Supply chains are likely less complex and so have fewer critical point to go wrong. They are also probably able to switch suppliers more easily if required.
They will manage to get things sorted out more easily before and afterwards.
Smaller companies have less leverage in negotiating new contracts. In purchasing this is offset by probably being able to be more flexible. In sales this is harder if they are selling to larger companies.
Overall economy
So multiply the above throughout the economy and you get a large variation across companies depending on how the individual supply chains which they are a part of are hit. Everyone will kind of muddle through as best they can but things will be far from efficient for as long as there are significant parts of the world in lockdown, even for companies which aren’t in lockdown.
The obvious cost of lockdown (lack of productivity) is likely to be the most important and other considerations are likely to be large but considerably smaller.
***
I wrote the above and then realised that this was based on the assumption that overall demand for your product will be the same a year after lockdown as it was a year before. For many industries this is probably true but others (e.g. some luxury goods?) might not bounce back fully or might bounce back into a different shape than before. This is a completely different question that I’m not sure how to answer.
Lessons from China
Although certainly not a perfect comparison, I’ve been interested in the first trends in consumer behaviour emerging out of China after 3 months of social distancing and strict quarantine in key areas.
Disclaimer: The report quoted below has limitations but is also one of the very few English sources of market data I could find so far. I still think it might be an interesting exercise to look at the data and try to ask how might the trends be different in the US.
Link to report
Sample:
900 respondents, 300 people from three Tier 1 cities: Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou
each group was presented with 3 scenarios (Note: it seems that since the survey was conducted the reality has proven it’s partly the base case (we’re seeing lowering cases in China) and pessimistic (global spread).
optimistic (COVID mortality rate < 1%, infections dramatically reduce starting Feb)
base ( 40,000+ cases, 1,000+ deaths, stabilization by May/June)
pessimistic (numbers continue to grow, more cities become quarantined, global spread, destabilization continues until end of 2020)
4 main consumer types & overall trend:
Young professionals—resilient in spending, most likely to start spending on travel the fastest, as things stabilize
Retired consumers with lower incomes—spending will drop overall with a predicted exception for packaged goods
Mature consumers with higher incomes—largely unaffected but predicted to lower luxury spending under the pessimistic scenario
White-collar mothers—most likely to reduce spending on clothing and cosmetics
Key highlights:
1. Overall consumers do not expect drastic changes in their demand, with respondents only expecting a 17% change in their budget from 2019.
2. 60% are likely to spend the same or more in the next 3 months vs the same period in 2019.
3. Under all scenarios, reduction in travel and dining out spending is the highest, but also the quickest to recover under the optimistic scenario. Especially for lower-income customers, demand for packaged goods is likely to increase the most, the worse the scenario.
4. In terms of online buying, household goods and luxury items might experience the strongest move to e-commerce, the longer the duration of the coronavirus situation.
5. Especially for high-income mature consumers, demand for electronic devices is predicted to increase under pessimistic scenario.
Some other interesting facts from China I stumbled upon:
1. Quick rebound in air travel demand - a 78% increase in the past 6 weeks
2. Negative social effects of putting 760M people in quarantine:
increase in domestic violence
increase in divorce rates
3. The current drop in pollution levels, if sustained over 2 months, could save 4,000 kids under 5 and 73,000 adults over 70 in China
4. Quick facts from a Twitter thread by Nicole Quinn (Lightspeed Ventures investor):
mental health—DAU for the Tencent’s new mental health program grew from 330k before the outbreak to 36m after
cooking revolution—in February grocery delivery was +60%, food delivery was down 50% while recipe app usage grew +44.
internet use—daily internet usage/person increased from 6.1 hrs before the crisis to 7.3 hrs after
I’d be interested to brainstorm which of these trends are likely to be seen in the US/Europe in the next couple of months and what might be different.
If anyone has other sources of data (or perhaps knows Chinese and could share some local reports), that would be great!
One piece of this is how many businesses will go out of business.
My cousin, who owns a small business, suggested that 50-75% of small businesses might go under based on a couple of months of being unable to earn money. I don’t know enough specifics to dissect exactly what that means but just to name some more specific questions that probably have answers:
How much operating runway do most small businesses have?
How much of that determination is based on rent, and how likely is it that they will have rent payments suspended for a month or more?
How much of that is from payroll, and how much lower will payroll costs be? Presumably much lower for businesses that are not operating at all.
Will employees return to work without difficulty in general?
What will be provided in terms of government assistance?
If a large number of small businesses go under, this will have significant downstream effects on the economy.
Will business lot rents go down?
Where will business owners transition for work?
Will some job markets be flooded? Which ones? How much will this vary by area?
Source: NPR https://www.npr.org/2020/03/20/819293063/our-covid-19-indicators-of-the-week
Some questions that seem relevant to my overall model here:
What percentage of the economy is “essential business?”, according to most shelter-in-place laws?
Seems like a fairly large number of businesses are essential according to california law, large enough that counting it up manually would be a pretty big project.
This article claims the New York law affects 75% of the workforce.
What percentage should be considered “essential business” for purposes of maintaining longterm supply chains? California lists “critical manufacturing” as an essential industry but I wouldn’t be that surprised if it turned out to be missing pieces that turn out to be important for longterm functioning.
What fraction of jobs currently “can’t be remote”, but which could become remote with retooling?
I know one person who’s already been laid off. I suspect there should be numbers somewhere we can look for how many people were laid off in the first 2 weeks, which may give us some inkling of what’s to come.
Ballpark: 40m, out of 160m total.
I made a spreadsheet, using the CA definition but numbers for all of the US. It’s not perfect- some industries I couldn’t find at all (communications is the biggest blank space), the divisions used by the statistics don’t map perfectly to the divisions used by the CA definitions, most numbers are from 2018, etc. But it’s a start.
3.3m people filed for unemployment insurance in America in the last week. The previous record was 700k in 1982, when the population was 230m
UChicago professors use survey data to estimate 1⁄3 of jobs can be done at home, accounting for 44% of payroll. See here, scroll down to “How Many Jobs Can Be Done At Home?”
I don’t think the question can be answered as posed, because it is underspecified. In the comparative, realist case, however, I think it is overwhelmingly obvious that the impacts are positive—i.e. far less negative than not imposing them.
First, the question of economic effects is a comparative one, i.e. what will be the economic effects compared to not having quarantine. That means we’re asking about how much quarantine changes the economy compared to some other policy—and which one matters greatly. If the alternative is required masks in public, maximum gathering sizes of 5 people in a room, and physical distancing enforced by large fines, the difference is far smaller than if the alternative is a request to return to status quo ante.
Second, the question is also potentially either a counterfactual one, or a realist one. That is, either we are asking what the counterfactual economic effects are if we could control reaction completely, and not implement a quarantine, or we are asking what the world realistically looks like in a world where we do not implement a quarantine now. The second case is one where two weeks from today, as the death toll in the US and elsewhere mounts to currently unimaginable to the public levels, people would be demanding that politicians reverse course—and you would have even more strict quarantine, for longer, that is less effective due to the delay. If politicians were able to withstand this pressure, this might not be relevant, but it should be clear that in the US and most other places, they simply will not—when death tolls are in the 10s of thousands, and increasing rapidly, instead of holding course, they would reimpose the quarantine, if not overreact in the other direction. That would mean ordering months of full quarantine instead of weeks and slowly relaxing them when prudent, and instead going further than public health officials recommend, creating potentially even more severe economic impact.
I basically agree with “this question really depends on what the counterfactual is.” (And I personally guess the counterfactual is ‘knee-jerk-quarantine response in a couple weeks that is worse than swift action on all dimensions.’)
I still think the question is useful for a couple reasons:
Simplifying the problem
For “what policies should governments do, and/or what should people advocate for?”, the ultimate answer is pretty complex, includes “what you expect the government to do by default, and what do you think the easiest thing to get them to do instead.”
But, answering the simpler question of “how will this affect the economy” helps give some gears to inform the more complicated questions.
What sort of economic trends to brace for
If you think (as I do) that quarantine is basically inevitable, it still matters “what will happen to the economy tho?”, not for deciding what to do about coronavirus, but for how to plan the rest of your life.
I think of we’re talking about the counterfactual with the best tradeoffs, it might look something like quarantining the most vulnerable populations while having others get back to work.
The ILO (international labour Organization, a UN agency) has a report on this.
Some key findings: Estimated increase in unemployment of 5-25 million—c.f. 22 million for 2008-9 crisis
These based on assumptions of 2-8% drop in global gdp
Value add from Chinese Industrial was down 13.5% in Jan/Feb
We need a rapid test to identify people with immunity, so they can go back to work.
Quarantine is worth it, hospitals are overwhelmed, but it is failing, and will continue to fail. The sooner we can identify people who have gotten it and recovered, then put those people to work in high exposure occupations, the sooner we can restart the economy.
The classes of treatment needed here are as follows:
Rapid pcr test: expensive, and needed for surveillance of key workers, as well as contact tracing. We have this, but it won’t scale.
Vaccine: this enables eradication, but is a minimum of 18 months away, and the effort may fail
Post exposure prophylaxis: something given before or immediately after exposure that stops the disease in its tracks (healthcare workers need this, if antimalarials do the job, yay we know those are safe and effective prophylactically)
Symptomatic relief: something given when early symptoms show, which pregents the development of catastrophic symptoms (the malaria drug will hopefully fit this)
Catastrophic care: more and better ventilators and ways of managing ards/cytokine storm. Gl with this, we wanted it before thia crisis.
Rapid antibody test: identifies patients who are exposed. Two weeks after a positive test, if the patient hasn’t been admitted to a hospital, it will be safe to say that that particular patient will not require that level of care and is probably no longer contagious.
We need the rapid antibody test, and we need about a billion of them, do rolling tests, if someone has a positive test and thinks they had symptoms > 1 week prior, return them to work and tell them to avoid anyone with a negative test for a week, if they can.
Antibody tests are here but are not being used to reopen (worries that people will variolate to go back to work, if that’s the case wtf is wrong with your economy).
Prophylaxis and symptomatic relief appears to be ‘Vitamin D to mitigate the bradykinin storm’: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-77093-z “As per the flexible approach in the current COVID-19 pandemic authors recommend mass administration of vitamin D supplements to population at risk for COVID-19.” Sure ok, one weird trick that actually works, nice.
Rapid PCR and in New Zealand, full genome sequencing for contact tracing is a thing, awesome. Rapid antigen tests are a thing too, but not helping the economy.
Idk about what works in hospitals, but ventilators and fentanyl scare me more than ‘happy hypoxemia’ so if I’m conscious enough to say don’t take me to a hospital, that’s what I’m saying. Remdesivir is not widely available enough for me to bother thinking about.
The DIY corona vaccine appears from what research has been done to be safe (no biologists who took it died) and according to animal model studies, effective. I have the wherewithal to construct it if I want, I haven’t bothered, therefore I probably won’t screw with the official one when it hits.
Based on present death rates and the state of the economy, quarantine wasn’t worth it.
Edit: my best guess about ‘long hauler’ symptoms is that they’re consistent with permanent damage to the lungs and long term low-moderate hypoxia, lung transplants and oxygen bottles are really the only treatments for that (if you can cure scarring and regenerate lung tissue, let the asbestosis and silicosis communities know), so long-haulers are probably screwed. Vitamin D should limit or halt this process.
This supercomputer model seems trustworthy so far: https://elemental.medium.com/a-supercomputer-analyzed-covid-19-and-an-interesting-new-theory-has-emerged-31cb8eba9d63
This is more about expanding the question with slightly more specific questions:
Currently it seems like there are many people who are not scared enough, but I wonder if sentiment could quickly go the other way?
A worst-case scenario for societal collapse is that some “essential” workers are infected and others decide that it is too risky to keep working, and there are not enough people to replace them. Figuring out which sectors might be most likely to have critical labor shortages seems important.
An example of a “labor” shortage might be a lack of volunteers for blood donations.
Other than that, logistical supply bottlenecks seem more of an issue?
It seems likely that supply will be more important than demand until the recovery phase and then a big question will be to what extent do people make a persistent change in their preferences. Going without stuff for a while might cause some reconsideration about how important it actually is. An example might be that more people learn to cook and decide they like it, or maybe they try Soylent or whatever. Or, perhaps exercising in a gym is less important for people who get into an exercise routine at home or outside?
Maybe private ownership of cars and suburban living (enforcing social distance) get a boost, along with increased remote work making it more practical. The costs of lower density living might not seem so pressing?