Attention Economy


Saturday, February 29, 2020

Is it a Demand Shock or a Supply Shock?

How the Coronavirus Could Reignite a Lurking Debt Bomb
David Dayen notes:
“Coronavirus has ushered in a demand shock that is already roiling markets. When China, home to the largest consumer base in the world, goes on lockdown for more than a month, nobody there shops at stores for discretionary goods like luxury items. Nobody goes out to eat. People work from home, and don’t turn on the lights or the air conditioning at the office. And perhaps most important, nobody travels to work, and factories don’t use any energy. This demand shock for energy could resurrect a persistent risk in the economy that hasn’t yet manifested: a years-long surge in corporate debt”.


Why a Coronavirus Recession Would Be So Hard to Contain
A supply shock is not a problem our usual economic tools are particularly good at solving. But it’s the one we face.

John Cassidy notes:
“In assessing the economic impact of the virus, some analysts have interpreted the market slide as a temporary shock to production—a “supply shock.” Thinking along these lines, a number of Wall Street forecasters have bravely predicted that economic growth, after taking a hit in the first part of this year, will rebound sharply. This matches what happened after the shock of 9/11, and it could happen again. But there is another, darker narrative in which rising infection rates, falling stock prices, and the widespread adoption of emergency restrictions on international travel and internal movements combine to produce a substantial fall in spending by consumers and businesses—a “demand shock,” which then interacts with the supply shock to produce a deeper and more lasting downturn”. 


Markets Are in Crisis, Not the Financial System