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Why Confidence in the Economy Matters During a Pandemic

The fear that an epidemic could reappear will likely exert a downward force on prices and demand for decades to come.

Published
March 20, 2020
Publication
Finance and Investing
Jump to main content
Article Author(s)
Laura Veldkamp

Laura Veldkamp

Leon G. Cooperman Professor of Finance & Economics
Finance Division
Someone yelling excitedly into their cell phone, standing on the stock exchange floor
Category
Thought Leadership
Topic(s)
Economics and Policy

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The cost of COVID-19 is as yet unmeasurable, but it is creating seismic disruptions that will be felt for a long time to come. First, and foremost, is the loss of lives. But there are also two components to the economic costs that should be addressed.

One component is the direct cost: sweeping business closures and higher health care expenditures. The second component, fear and mitigation policies, have accounted for the bulk of the costs so far.

Shuttering schools means many parents can't work. Closing borders means business is interrupted. But it's the human fear of exposure to the virus that has the potential to decimate the travel and entertainment sectors even when the pandemic has abated and airports and theaters have reopened.

This fear feeds on itself. If I am a provider of leisure goods and I expect that others will not buy my leisure goods, I expect to be poorer. That makes me less likely to work long hours and less likely to spend on others' goods. What we do depends on what we expect others to do.

Confidence matters.

That confidence is what we saw shattered as public health policy failed to contain the COVID-19 virus. Confidence is easily broken and slowly repaired. I am sure that as a country, we will pull through and Wall Street and Main Street will recover to pre-virus levels. But the fear that such an epidemic could reappear will likely exert a downward force on prices and demand, for decades to come.

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