Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Coronavirus News (274)

July Is the New January: More Companies Delay Return to the Office From Ford to Microsoft, white-collar companies are increasingly extending working from home through next summer. ...........  and acknowledged the inevitable: The pandemic isn’t going away anytime soon. .............  as the coronavirus shatters work norms and upends assumptions about where workers need to be to achieve maximum productivity ............ “The reality is hitting that, ‘There won’t be a vaccine as I expected very quickly. This is going to be my life, and I’d better learn how to do this.’” ........... likened the situation to waiting at an airport terminal for a flight that is continually delayed ..........   Much of corporate America is now following the lead of Silicon Valley tech companies like Google and Facebook. They were among those that allowed employees to work from home even before the pandemic hit in full force in March. Since then, Facebook has set the tone in planning for permanent remote work .............  announcing the June 2021 return date to employees prompted a “collective sigh of relief inside the company” .......... Remote work has been productive ... and people like not having to commute. But a mix of in-person and remote is probably the most popular option for employees when life returns to normal ... because they also miss the social interaction of an office space. ........... Zoom “is not the same thing, and it’s exhausting,” Ms. Burke said. “By 7 o’clock last night, I was Zoomed out.” .........  digital work is often simpler for people to conduct via laptops and teleconferences than by being on site .............  how productive its employees have been remotely   




Trump’s False Claims as He Resumes His Rallies After Hospitalization In Florida, the president made a series of inaccurate claims about his election opponent, the coronavirus pandemic, the Nobel Peace Prize and Cuba, among other topics.  

Vaccine, Chaos, Confusion It’s tempting to look at the first vaccine as President Trump does: an on-off switch that will bring back life as we know it. .......... But vaccine experts say we should prepare instead for a perplexing, frustrating year. .............  The first vaccines may provide only moderate protection, low enough to make it prudent to keep wearing a mask. .......... Each company is running its own trial, comparing its jab with a placebo. .......... some wanted to test a number of vaccines all at once, against each other — what’s known as a master protocol. ........... Some researchers, including Dr. Fauci, advocated a design much like the W.H.O.’s. ............ The authorization of a vaccine will depend on how much protection the vaccine provides in the Phase 3 trial — what scientists refer to as its efficacy. In June, the F.D.A. set 50 percent efficacy as the target for a coronavirus vaccine. ..............  Operation Warp Speed was on track to have up to 700 million doses of various vaccines by March or April — enough, he said, for “all Americans who wish to get it.” .......... “We’ll have to continue to use a mask for some of these vaccines” ..........   a group of older people could all have strokes shortly after being vaccinated 

Chinese President Xi Jinping urges push towards hi-tech independence Xi says self-reliance is essential because the country is ‘on the cusp of unprecedented changes’ Comments come ahead of address to mark Shenzhen Special Economic Zone milestone





Coronavirus News (273)

Is Vietnam the Next ‘Asian Miracle’? The country is making autocratic capitalism work unusually well. ........ Using mass texts, TV ads, billboards, posters and loudspeakers, the government exhorted the nation’s 100 million citizens to identify carriers and trace contacts, contacts of contacts, even contacts of contacts of contacts. Rapid isolation of outbreaks has kept Vietnam’s death rate among the four lowest in the world — well under one death per million people. .........  Containing the pandemic allowed Vietnam to quickly reopen businesses, and it is now expected to be the world’s fastest growing economy this year. .........  Even more impressive, its growth is driven by a record trade surplus, despite the collapse in global trade. ........... After World War II the “Asian miracles” — first Japan, then Taiwan and South Korea, most recently China — grew their way out of poverty by opening to trade and investment and becoming manufacturing export powerhouses. ............  Even as global trade slumped in the 2010s, Vietnam’s exports grew 16 percent a year, by far the fastest rate in the world, and three times the emerging-world average. ............  While other emerging countries spend heavily on social welfare in an effort to appease voters, Vietnam devotes its resources to its exports, building roads and ports to get goods overseas and building schools to educate workers. .................. Over the last five years, foreign direct investment has averaged more than 6 percent of G.D.P. in Vietnam, the highest rate of any emerging country. Most of it goes to building manufacturing plants and related infrastructure, and most of it now comes from fellow Asian countries, including South Korea, Japan and China. The old miracles are helping to build the new one..................  Average annual per capita income in Vietnam has quintupled since the late 1980s to nearly $3,000 per person, but the cost of labor is still one half that of China, and the work force is unusually well educated for its income class. That skilled labor is helping Vietnam move “up the ladder,” perhaps faster than any rival, to manufacture increasingly sophisticated goods. Tech surpassed clothing and textiles as Vietnam’s leading export in 2015, and accounts for most of its record trade surplus this year. .................   Vietnam is also a trend-bending, Communist champion of open borders, a signatory to more than a dozen free trade agreements ........... is making autocratic capitalism work unusually well, through open economic policies and sound financial management. ........... Vietnam has sustained strong growth so far, largely free of the classic excesses, like large government deficits or public debts.  

If Amy Coney Barrett Were Muslim It’s not hard to imagine how conservatives would smear her religious beliefs. ........... I’m a practicing Muslim living through an administration that campaigned for a Muslim ban. My community has endured two decades of hazing after the Sept. 11 attacks, and our loyalty is still deemed suspect. I would never wish that kind of judgment on a person of another faith. 

 Mitch McConnell’s Mission of Misery Why Senate Republicans won’t help Americans in need. ........  I keep seeing news reports saying that the Trump administration is “pivoting” on economic stimulus. But Donald Trump has been reversing positions so frequently that it looks less like a series of pivots than like a tailspin. .............  the best guess is that for the next three-plus months — that is, until President Joe Biden takes office (highly likely, though not certain) with a Democratic Senate (more likely than not, but definitely not a sure thing) — there will be little or no aid for the millions of families, thousands of businesses and many state and local governments on the brink of disaster. .............. most Senate Republicans .... They’re willing to cover for Trump’s unprecedented corruption; they’re apparently unbothered by his fondness for foreign dictators. But spending money to help Americans in distress? That’s where they draw the line. .............  Lindsey Graham declared that emergency unemployment benefits would be extended “over our dead bodies” (actually 215,000 other people’s dead bodies, but who’s counting?). ............ And McConnell — whose state benefits from far more federal spending than it pays in taxes — derided proposed aid to states as a “blue state bailout.” ......... it’s hard to think of any major G.O.P.-approved fiscal legislation in the past two decades that didn’t redistribute income upward. ............. And that’s why Republicans are unwilling to provide desperately needed aid to economic victims of the pandemic. They aren’t worried that a relief package would fail; they’re worried that it might succeed, showing that sometimes more government spending is a good thing. Indeed, a successful relief package might pave the way for Democratic proposals that would, among other things, drastically reduce child poverty.