The interests of the health of our people and that of the overall economy have never been so finely pitted against each other as they are in the discussion about just when and at what pace we start opening up the economy.
This is especially true of our economy, which was already in a technical recession heading into the “great lockdown” with an already stretched public health sector.
I am sure debates about just how we emerge from our homes have consumed the government as the days and weeks have dragged on in this unprecedented period for the world.
The economic fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic makes for some devastating reading, with projections of a contraction for the year as high as 8%. Incomes will fall (and already have in some cases), with estimates of about a million job losses in the private sector, a similar number to the 2009 recession.
Economic historians are predicting this global slump will be comparable to if not worse than the Great Depression, which tells me the predicted job losses are a conservative number.
The statistics scream for an intervention from the SA state that placed us in lockdown, especially as we consider that to date we’ve recorded 54 deaths and 3,158 cases of Covid-19. It’s a figure that compares favourably with our European and US counterparts that are reeling from death rates reminiscent of wartime.
But before we go busting down the doors of the government to ease restrictions, we need to consider the closure of a bakery in Durban and a hospital in Gauteng just last week because of the spread of the disease among workers. It is a reminder of the inherent risk of throwing open the floodgates to the economy too soon.
