Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
No one knows what a return to ‘normalcy’ after COVID-19 will look like
No one knows what a return to ‘normalcy’ after COVID-19 will look like
Apr 28, 2025 8:11 AM

At some point, not today but perhaps in the next few weeks, we will be having more conversations about getting people back to work and restoring the $21 trillion U.S. economy.

Some signs indicate the coronavirus pandemic may turn soon in the United States.

Even if the entire nation makes an all-out effort to restrict contact, coronavirus deaths will peak in the next two weeks, with patients overwhelming hospitals in most states, according to a University of Washington study.

The national response to COVID-19, particularly among doctors, nurses, law enforcement and emergency response personnel, has been inspiring. Even the military is stepping in, building field hospitals and moving other medical supplies into position for civilian use. If you want to see what personal sacrifice and risk in a time of great crisis look like, the examples are everywhere in this country.

When the time is right, we may also need an equally urgent, all-hands-on-deck response to the economy, and it will most likely be experimental and messy. Trillions in government stimulus funding will help in some quarters, but it won’t be enough to prevent huge stress, pervasive dislocation of workers and widespread failure panies. The whole idea of returning American life to “normal” may not be the right way to put it—we don’t know what normal looks like anymore.

We need to begin figuring out our new normal without fearing accusations of “putting profits before people.” That’s nonsense. An economic collapse is not good for anyone, particularly the U.S. health care system. The American Enterprise Institute recently published a “roadmap” for addressing the pandemic in a way that respects human life, acknowledges the incredible risks this threat presents, and prudently examines ways to get America’s economic gears turning again. This is the sort of conversation we need in our political culture right now, one that doesn’t use the pandemic to score points in an election year.

The record 6.6 million workers applied for jobless claims last week, a glimpse of what we can expect in the short-term. The new numbers were released today. The Wall Street Journal noted that this mark was set “after 3.3 million sought benefits two weeks ago as theU.S. shut down parts of the economyin an effort to contain the virus.” More from the Journal:

“The speed and magnitude of the labor market’s decline is unprecedented,” said Constance Hunter, chief economist at KPMG LLP. Ms. Hunter said she expected that millions more claims will be filed in ing weeks and projects 20 million jobs will be lost.

There are several reasons why unemployment claims are likely to remain high in ing weeks. For one, many states haven’t fully processed all unemployment-benefit applications due to the deluge. Further,the federal rescue packagesigned into law last week increases the pool of workers who can tap benefits by making independent contractors and self-employed individuals eligible.

Economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis estimated an unemployment rate of 32.1% for the second quarter of 2020. That’s equal to 53 million people, and no, that’s not a typo. “This slowdown of economic activity could inevitably lead to solvency and liquidity problems that result in workers being laid off,” the Fed said.

Bloomberg News is already reporting on how law firms are gearing up to handle distressed and failing businesses.

Even as bankruptcy lawyers themselves adjust to the new routine of working from home, many are seeing a spike in business they haven’t experienced since the September 2001 terrorist attacks and the 2008 global financial crisis.

“I think that at some level this process is going to rewrite the rules of restructuring,” Squire Patton Boggs attorney Karol Denniston said. “We’ve never lived at a time where we had to face this many factors at the same time.”

With a sudden collapse of demand in the airline, restaurant, hotel, oil and gas, and retail industries caused by widespread calls for home quarantines and social panies are desperately looking for financial strategies. The phones started ringing nonstop over the past week, much as they did in 2008, said Jessica Boelter of Sidley Austin.

I spent a lot of time in bankruptcy court when I worked as a business writer for newspapers and business publications. Bankruptcy is ugly stuff. No one emerges unscathed, whether employees, creditors or owners. munities can be rocked by a major business failure, and those effects can be long lasting.

We also can’t lose sight of the broader social toll taken by this kind of deep joblessness, one that won’t be easily reversed by flipping a switch when the es. We’ve known for years that the country has deep pockets of despair, addiction and social atomization. Listen to the Acton Line interview I did with Tim Carney a year ago about his new book, Alienated America: While some places thrive while others collapse. Then consider these words from the show notes for that episode:

The “American Dream” is fading away in much of the country, and the problem isn’t pure economics, nor is it a case of stubborn old white men falling behind because they refuse embrace progress. Tim argues that the root cause of our problems; crumbling families, despair, political dysfunction, is the erosion munity and local, civil institutions, most especially church. The result of a secularizing country is a plague of alienation for the working class, as people struggle to build families and improve their lives without the support structure they need.

If you think nationalism and populism are currently a problem in the United States, then just watch what happens if we don’t get people working again in numbers close to what we had before the pandemic.

It bears repeating: The best poverty-reduction program is a good job. When the time is right—and not a minute before—Americans will be eager to return to their jobs, reopen their businesses and get factories humming again. But it’s time to start thinking and talking about what that looks like.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Biased in Favor of the Entrepreneur State
Yesterday I argued that since bias is inherent in institutions and neutrality between individual and social spheres is illusory we should harness and direct the bias of institutions towards a free and virtuous society characterized by individual liberty and sustained by religious principles. One of the ways we can do that in the economic realm, I believe, is to encourage a bias toward entrepreneurship and away from corporatism. As Derek Thompson, a senior editor at The Atlantic, says, “It would...
Libertarians, Religious Conservatives, and the Myth of Social Neutrality
When es to our view of individual liberty, one of the most unexplored areas of distinction between libertarians and religious conservatives* is how we view neutrality and bias. Because the differences are uncharted, I have no way of describing the variance without resorting to a grossly simplistic caricature—so with a grossly simplistic caricature we shall proceed: Libertarians believe that neutrality between the various spheres of society—and especially betweenthe government and the individual—are both possible and desirable, and so the need...
What does it mean to be On Call In Culture?
Most of us know what it feels like… this pull toward something. Whether it is art or science or writing or business—there is something inside you that says, “Yes, this is where I belong. This is what I was meant to do!” As Christians this realization e with a bit of disappointment mixed with the excitement of finding our place. We somehow wish that our calling were something of a more spiritual nature…something that mattered more. But here’s a question:...
No Olympic Dream: Monti’s wake up call to Italy
On Valentine’s Day, just one day before having to tender its application to the International Olympic Committee in Lausanne, Switzerland, Italy’s pragmatic Prime Minister Mario Monti showed no romantic spirit by canceling his nation’s dream to host the 2020 Summer Olympics. In a last-minute decision made Feb. 14, Prime Minister Monti explained at a press conference that the already overburdened Italian taxpayers simply cannot afford to finance the estimated $12.5 billion to bring the 2020 Olympic Games to Rome. “I...
Politicians and the Pursuit of Happiness
In this week’s Acton Commentary I conclude, “The American people do not need politicians to tell them what happiness is and how it should be pursued.” I admit that I didn’t have this quote in mind (or I would have used it!), but Art Carden (follow him here and read him here) notes the following from Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations: What is the species of domestic industry which his capital can employ, and of which the produce is likely...
Gleaner Tech #1: Solar Bottle Lights in the Philippines
[Note: This is the first in an occasional series on gleaner technology.] In the Philippines, the cost of electricity often means poor citizens are left in the dark—even when the sun is shining. Social entrepreneur Illac Diaz e up with an indigenous and ingenious solution for lighting problems in the country’s e areas: He use plastic bottles, water, and chlorine to lighten up the dark homes of poor. The solution provides both a cheap source of lighting and environmentally friendly...
Gleaner Technology
Gleaning is the traditional Biblical practice of gathering crops that would otherwise be left in the fields to rot, or be plowed under after harvest. The biblical mandate for the es from Deuteronomy 24:19, When you reap your harvest in your field and forget a sheaf in the field, you shall not go back to get it. It shall be for the sojourner, the fatherless, and the widow, that the LORD your God may bless you in all the work...
Government and Gambling
Over at Mere Comments I note the recent invective against gambling leveled by Al Mohler and Russell Moore. I contend that as opposed to casinos, lotteries are in fact the most troubling example of state-sponsored gambling. And I also worry a bit about the use of legal means to prohibit gambling, as it isn’t so clear to me that gambling is always and in every case a moral evil. Thus, I write, that cultural rather than primarily political attempts to...
Madison on Religious Conscience
The HHS Mandate is troubling to so many simply because it’s a clear Constitutional violation. Any basic understanding of Constitutional rights and our religious freedom sees that this is primarily about religious liberty, and not solely an issue concerning contraceptives or Roman Catholics. Last week we heard from James Madison on religious liberty in my post “Religious Liberty or Government Tolerance?” In 1792, Madison wrote an essay titled “Property” in the National Gazette. This is a brilliant piece by Madison...
Samuel Gregg: Inequality Anyone?
Over at National Review Online, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg takes a look at a recent Charles Blow op-ed in the New York Times in which the writer hyperventilates about statements made by Rick Santorum on the subject of e inequality. Economically speaking, e inequality reflects the workings of several factors, many of which are essential if we want a dynamic, growing economy. Even your average neo-Keynesian economist will acknowledge that, without incentives (such as the prospect of a higher...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved