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COVID-19 >> New Drug Activity & VACCINE TRACKING!!

Started by cc, January 26, 2020, 09:18:38 PM

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Odinson

First coronavirus death in Finland..



The patient was extremely old.





521 coronavirus cases in Finland..



61% of the infected are men.

@realAzhyaAryola

Our enemies are watching and are taking note what we are not prepared for.
@realAzhyaAryola



[size=80]Sometimes, my comments have a touch of humor, often tongue-in-cheek, so don\'t take it so seriously.[/size]

@realAzhyaAryola

#962
[size=200]Thanks to Sanctions, Russia Is Cushioned From Virus's Economic Shocks[/size]



Years of economic isolation and bulging financial reserves have positioned the country to ride out the coronavirus panic and bounce right back.

By Andrew E. Kramer

March 20,2020



https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/20/world/europe/russia-coronavirus-covid-19.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/20/worl ... id-19.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/20/world/europe/russia-coronavirus-covid-19.html



MOSCOW — Six years ago, the United States and the European Union slammed the door on Western bank loans for Russian companies, starving the country's oil and banking industries of financing. The harsh measures were intended to punish Russia for military interventions in Ukraine and Syria and for meddling in the 2016 American election to help Donald J. Trump.



Paradoxically, however, those sanctions and the policies Russia enacted in response prepared the Kremlin for what came this month: a universal dislocation of the global economy from the coronavirus pandemic and an oil price war that led to a collapse in oil prices and the revenues that Russia relies upon to support social spending.



Far from being a basket case, Russia enters the crisis with bulging financial reserves, its big companies nearly free of debt and all but self-sufficient in agriculture. After Russia was hit with the sanctions, President Vladimir V. Putin's government and companies adapted to isolation and were virtually forced to prepare for economic shocks like the one hammering the global economy today.

"Russia will be a bit better off than other countries because of its experience, because of sanctions and because of reserves," said Vladimir V. Tikhomirov, chief economist for BCS Global Markets, referring to the roughly $600 billion in gold and hard currency reserves the country has amassed.



To be sure, Russia has taken a hard hit from the collapse of oil prices, with the national currency, the ruble, losing about 20 percent of its value in recent weeks. Oil and natural gas account for about 60 percent of Russia's exports.

It is still too early to predict how outbreaks of the virus will spread and how various governments will respond. Given the state of Russia's ramshackle and underfunded health care system, the coronavirus outbreak could be catastrophic. With the state's tight grip on the news media, many Russians suspect that the Kremlin could be hiding the scale of the problem or the extent of preparedness, hampering an effective response.



Still, some countries, Russia among them, seem better positioned than others. For Russia, that is linked to the Western sanctions.



Take, for example, a 2014 sanction limiting loans from Western financial institutions to a maximum of three months. Russian companies responded by paying down their debt so that total government and corporate foreign debt in Russia fell to $455 billion at the start of this year from $713 billion in 2014. By contrast, Western companies have taken advantage of low interest rates to run up trillions of dollars in debt in the past decade.



"Russia over the past six years has been living with a hostile foreign environment because of sanctions," said Mr. Tikhomirov. When the virus threat passes, he said, "it's possible things will come back to life faster in Russia than in other countries because there won't be the negative drag of debt."



The Russian government on Thursday published its plan to contain the virus and maintain economic activity. It said that all pneumonia patients would now be tested and that the country was making 100,000 test kits a day.
@realAzhyaAryola



[size=80]Sometimes, my comments have a touch of humor, often tongue-in-cheek, so don\'t take it so seriously.[/size]

@realAzhyaAryola

The reserves will come into play during a recovery, though, as Russia will not be competing for financing from capital markets to stimulate the economy.



For years, economists criticized Russian economic policy as overly conservative, emphasizing saving over spending. It seemed to reflect a deep-seated Russian belief: No matter how bad things are today, they can always get worse. Now, that policy looks justified, particularly in view of the country's reliance on natural resource extraction for most of its hard currency earnings.



"Russia is more ready than ever before in its history," said Vladimir Osakovsky, the chief Russia economist at the Bank of America, referring to the economic fallout from the virus's spread.

Russia built those reserves throughout the sanctions period by writing into its budget an artificially low estimate for the global price of oil. All tax on profits above that level went into the national piggy bank. The policy starved the economy of investment — the gross domestic product grew at 1.3 percent last year — but put Russia in a solid position entering the coronavirus crisis.



Russia's agricultural sector is also benefiting from changes introduced after sanctions on food imports. Before European agricultural products fell victim to the sanctions war, for example, Koza Nostra, a small company making gourmet cheese, was a barely viable family enterprise. But after sanctions cut off French cheese imports, the company doubled and then tripled its output in ensuing years.



"It was the right approach," the general director, Aleksandr Asatryan, said of the Kremlin's move to prop up Russian agriculture in response to sanctions, useful today as insulation against trade disruptions.

Since 2014, the share of imported food on the Russian market has fallen to about 10 percent today from about 25 percent. Russia is self-sufficient for most staples other than fresh fruits and vegetables. More than guaranteeing nutrition, the shift allows the government to reserve its hard currency for a recovery rather than expend it propping up the ruble to keep imported food affordable.



"Even in a bad scenario, Russia can survive this shock better than many other economies," said Sofya Donets, an economist at Renaissance, a Moscow investment bank, who returned to work last week after a mandatory quarantine.
@realAzhyaAryola



[size=80]Sometimes, my comments have a touch of humor, often tongue-in-cheek, so don\'t take it so seriously.[/size]

Frood

I don't care...a lot of people, smart people, will die... and they will be replaced by stupid people...





...and we'll suffer even more....
Blahhhhhh...

@realAzhyaAryola

@realAzhyaAryola



[size=80]Sometimes, my comments have a touch of humor, often tongue-in-cheek, so don\'t take it so seriously.[/size]

cc

Spain's coronavirus cases leap by 5,000 in 24 hours, now only behind China and Italy
I really tried to warn y\'all in 49  .. G. Orwell

Anonymous

Quote from: "cc"Spain's coronavirus cases leap by 5,000 in 24 hours, now only behind China and Italy

Spain is one of Europe's major tourist hubs in the winter.

@realAzhyaAryola

It is like the black death sweeping over Europe in the middle ages.
@realAzhyaAryola



[size=80]Sometimes, my comments have a touch of humor, often tongue-in-cheek, so don\'t take it so seriously.[/size]

@realAzhyaAryola

When the President and the task force are giving the press briefings, they should also stand 6 feet away from one another.
@realAzhyaAryola



[size=80]Sometimes, my comments have a touch of humor, often tongue-in-cheek, so don\'t take it so seriously.[/size]

Frood

A lot of us are going to die... resign yourselves to it

..whether a month or 20 months...some of us will die... so get your business in order...
Blahhhhhh...

@realAzhyaAryola

Quote from: "Dinky Dazza"A lot of us are going to die... resign yourselves to it

..whether a month or 20 months...some of us will die... so get your business in order...


I prefer to stay positive.
@realAzhyaAryola



[size=80]Sometimes, my comments have a touch of humor, often tongue-in-cheek, so don\'t take it so seriously.[/size]

cc

Been keeping track (not a lot more to do holed up at home, lol)



Noticing a great difference in  the steady spread in US vs in Canada



March 14  >> March 21



US 3,400 >> 24,000 = multiple of 7.1

Can 317 >> 1,150    = multiple of 3.6



Now, I take all numbers with a grain of salt - as numbers are greatly affected by how much testing is done + is a factor not of cases, but of tested cases
I really tried to warn y\'all in 49  .. G. Orwell

Odinson

https://static.wixstatic.com/media/53e57b_a120d6735b1e440b9a66aed3af8df4a3~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_1000,h_926,al_c,q_90,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01/53e57b_a120d6735b1e440b9a66aed3af8df4a3~mv2.jpg">

Anonymous

More than 400 COVID-19 cases, 10 deaths in B.C.

27 people are currently in hospital with 12 people in intensive care

https://www.vicnews.com/news/more-than-400-covid-19-cases-10-deaths-in-b-c/">https://www.vicnews.com/news/more-than- ... hs-in-b-c/">https://www.vicnews.com/news/more-than-400-covid-19-cases-10-deaths-in-b-c/