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COVID-19 Scenarios: Rebooting an Economy in Free Fall

It's a bit early to talk recovery, but everyone is thinking about it.

See this text and the graph included with it:

The trajectory of COVID-19 and the economic response over the next few months is uncertain. To help businesses navigate this volatile period, the Conference Board has developed three scenarios for the course of the U.S. economy for the remainder of 2020:
  1. May reboot (quick recovery): Assuming a peak in new COVID-19 cases for the U.S. as a whole by mid-April (with some possible variation by region), economic activity may gradually resume beginning in May. GDP growth shrinks by 1.6 percent in 2020 (over 2019) in this scenario.
  2. Summertime V-shape (deeper contraction, bigger recovery): The peak in new COVID-19 cases will be higher and delayed until May, creating a larger economic contraction in Q2 but a stronger recovery in Q3. GDP drops in 2020 by 5.5 percent (over 2019).
  3. Fall recovery (extended contraction): Managed control of the outbreak helps to flatten the curve of new COVID-19 cases and stretches the economic impact across Q2 and Q3, with growth resuming by September. This results in the strongest contraction for 2020 at 6 percent.

Businesses should prepare for the “Summertime V-shape” and “Fall recovery” worst-case scenarios, which have high probability.
 
The information above comes from the Conference Board.  Access full text here: https://www.conference-board.org/economy-watch-US.


Eric Holdeman is a contributing writer for Emergency Management magazine and is the former director of the King County, Wash., Office of Emergency Management.