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Politics

Biden says rising wages are an indication his financial agenda is working

WASHINGTON — After weeks of defending his economic policies against critics who blame them for overheating the economy, President Joe Biden went on the offensive Thursday, arguing that rising wages are a sign his agenda is boosting the fortunes of working Americans.

“The bottom line is this: The Biden economic plan is working,” said the president in a speech at Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland, Ohio. “We’ve had record job creation, we’re seeing record economic growth, we’re creating a new paradigm. One that rewards work — the working people in this nation, not just those at the top.”

Republicans and business groups claim that the enhanced federal unemployment benefits in Biden’s American Rescue Plan, his signature domestic accomplishment, are to blame for a “labor shortage” that has forced corporations like McDonald’s and Bank of America to raise their minimum hourly wage.

Biden rejected this view of the economy: “When it comes to the economy we’re building, rising wages aren’t a bug, they’re a feature,” he said.

The president on Thursday renewed his call for Congress to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour.

Biden credited the American Rescue Plan and his ambitious vaccination program with jump-starting a U.S. economy battered by the Covid pandemic.

The bill passed with no Republican votes, but several Republicans later sought to take credit for it with their constituents despite having voted against it.

“I’m not going to embarrass anyone, but I have here a list of who, back in their districts, they’re bragging about the rescue plan,” said Biden, holding up a list of Republicans who touted the relief funding.

“I mean, some people have no shame,” he added. “I’m happy they know that it benefited their constituents, that’s okay with me. But if you are going to try to take credit for what we’ve done, don’t get in the way of what we still need to do.”

As Biden seeks to build support for more than $3 trillion in additional economic stimulus programs, Republican opposition is solidifying.

As the economy improves, conservatives are arguing that Biden’s proposed stimulus is no longer necessary.

Private sector wages rose 3% in the first quarter of this year, the fastest pace in at least 25 years, according to economist Mark Zandi. This has made it harder for employers to attract workers willing to work for minimum hourly wages.

“We want to get something economists call full employment, where instead of workers competing with each other for jobs that are scarce, we want employers to compete to attract workers,” Biden said.

Biden rejected the growing alarm among some businesses and economists that higher wages and full employment will lead to runaway inflation. Instead, he said, corporations can afford to pay workers more without passing on higher prices to consumers.

“A lot of companies have done extremely well in this crisis, and good for them,” he said. “The simple fact is, though, corporate profits are the highest they’ve been in decades. Workers’ pay is at the lowest it’s been in 70 years. We have more than ample room to raise worker pay without raising customer prices.”

In addition to supporting higher wages, Biden pressed for a corporate tax increase to 28%, revenue he will need to fund his ambitious infrastructure proposal. The American Jobs Plan proposes to spend around $2 trillion over the next decade revitalizing the country’s infrastructure and manufacturing sector.

The president also made it clear that he sees these tax hikes as more than just a necessary evil to fund his big plans: They’re a key part of reestablishing a sense of shared responsibility and shared burden across the American economy.

“We have a chance to seize the economic momentum of the first months of my administration, not just to build back, but to build back better,” he said. “And this time we’re going to deal everyone in.”

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Business

Argentina, Nepal and others see instances rising quickly like India

A patient receives oxygen while she waits outside a hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal on May 13, 2021. Government hospitals in the country lack beds for Covid-19 patients.

Sunil Pradhan | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

India is currently at the epicenter of the global coronavirus pandemic — but it is not the only country with a worsening Covid-19 outbreak.

From Argentina in Latin America to Nepal in Asia, many other countries have also reported record increases in Covid cases in the last few weeks, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, has expressed concerns over the raging health crisis around the world.

“India remains hugely concerning … but it’s not only India that has emergency needs,” he said at a news briefing this month.

The increase in infections has come as progress of vaccinations remains uneven across the world. Generally, developed countries such as the U.S. and the U.K. are ahead in vaccinating their populations while poorer nations in Africa and parts of Asia are lagging due to limited supply of shots.

Here’s a look at some places where Covid cases are surging.

Argentina

  • Cumulative cases: More than 3.5 million as of May 23, according to Hopkins data.
  • Cumulative deaths: More than 74,000 as of May 23, Hopkins data showed.
  • Vaccination: Around 19.25% of population received at least one dose, according to Our World in Data.

Argentina has in the last few weeks reported record-breaking numbers of daily cases and deaths, leading authorities to impose fresh lockdown measures that will last until end-May.

The measures, which came into force over the weekend, include closing schools and non-essential businesses, as well as banning social, religious and sporting events, reported Reuters.  

Reported cases rapidly rose from below 5,000 a day in early-March to a record-high of more than 39,000 last Wednesday, Hopkins data showed. The number of deaths also surged from 112 on March 1 to a record 744 last Tuesday, according to the data.

The worsening outbreak has swamped Argentina’s health-care system, and President Alberto Fernandez was quoted as saying last Thursday that “we are living the worst moment since the pandemic began.”

Vaccination is progressing slowly in the country, with around 19% of the roughly 45 million population having received at least one dose, according to statistics site Our World in Data.

Nepal

  • Cumulative cases: More than 513,000 as of May 23, according to Hopkins data.
  • Cumulative deaths: More than 6,300 as of May 23, Hopkins data showed.
  • Vaccination: Around 7.3% of population received at least one dose, according to Our World in Data.

In Asia, surging Covid cases are overloading Nepal’s fragile health-care system.  

“Our medical infrastructure is in crisis. The oxygen supply-demand gap is huge. We also have no more vaccines,” Dr. Samir Kumar Adhikari, the health ministry’s chief spokesperson, reportedly said.

Nepal, a landlocked country with a population of roughly 29 million, shares a border with India which has been experiencing a devastating second wave. India is now the world’s second worst affected country by cases reported.

Many people in Nepal blamed returning migrant workers from India for the rapid rise in Covid-19 cases, reported NBC News. Many of the returning Nepalese had lost their jobs and income when parts of India went into lockdown to curb the second wave of infections there, the report said.  

That caused Nepal’s daily cases to accelerate from below 200 at the start of April to a record-high of more than 9,300 in mid-May, Hopkins data showed.

Nepal is scrambling to secure Covid vaccines. The country started vaccinating its people in January with the AstraZeneca vaccine provided by India and Covax, a global alliance aimed at fairly distributing vaccines, reported Reuters. However, the South Asian nation has run out of shots with the Serum Institute of India yet to deliver the doses that Nepal ordered, the report said.

India has halted exports of Covid vaccines as it prioritizes its domestic needs.

Bahrain

  • Cumulative cases: More than 218,000 as of May 23, according to Hopkins data.
  • Cumulative deaths: At least 820 as of May 23, Hopkins data showed.
  • Vaccination: Around 51.8% of population received at least one dose, according to Our World in Data.

Among countries with surging coronavirus cases, Bahrain stood out as one of the few that have vaccinated a relatively large proportion of its population.

Reported cases in Bahrain jumped from around 600 a day in early-March to above 2,000 a day last week, according to Hopkins data.

Bahrain has approved several Covid vaccines for use, including Pfizer-BioNTech, China National Pharmaceutical Group or Sinopharm, and Russia’s Sputnik vaccine.

The country’s latest outbreak has contributed to concerns about the effectiveness of vaccines from Sinopharm and Sputnik. That’s especially so as other highly vaccinated countries — such as Israel and the U.K. — which rely mostly on western-developed shots, are reporting a decline in cases.

China, on its part, appeared to suggest last month that Chinese vaccines “don’t have very high protection rates.” The official who made the remark later tried to walk back on those comments, and said he was misunderstood.

But within Bahrain, the number of deaths reported daily — while increasing — has largely remained low even as infections are rising rapidly.

Taiwan

  • Cumulative cases: More than 4,300 as of May 23, according to Hopkins data.
  • Cumulative deaths: At least 23 as of May 23, Hopkins data showed.
  • Vaccination: Around 0.14% of population received at least one dose, according to Our World in Data.

Before the latest resurgence, Taiwan was widely applauded for its success in containing the spread of Covid-19 without a full lockdown.

The island with a population of roughly 24 million recorded just 1,128 cases — of which a large majority were imported — and 12 deaths by end-April, Hopkins data showed. But the number of daily cases surged past 200 in the last week, the data showed.

Such numbers remain a lot smaller compared to most countries and territories around the world, but are a milestone for Taiwan where daily life had largely continued as normal before the latest spike.

Some media reports blamed Taiwan’s complacency for the renewed outbreak.

Taiwanese authorities had relaxed quarantine requirements for airline crew members in mid-April; and a hotel near Taoyuan International Airport was found housing flight crews on quarantine with other visitors — which led to a cluster of infections in the latest outbreak.

Authorities have since imposed new social-distancing rules that limited social gatherings, closed some businesses and tightened border restrictions.

Taiwan, which has one of the lowest vaccination rates globally, is also trying to ramp up efforts to vaccinate its population.

Categories
Business

Rising airfares and resort charges are making holidays dearer

Passengers wearing face masks as a preventive measure against the spread of Covid-19 are seen on an escalator at Orlando International Airport.

Paul Hennessy | LightRocket | Getty Images

The number of people traveling again is on the rise. So are prices.

Airfares and hotel rates are climbing as travelers return in the highest numbers since the pandemic began, hitting beaches, mountains and visiting friends and family after a year of being cooped up.

Even the cost of a road trip is climbing as gasoline prices reach the highest levels since 2014.

The rock-bottom fares hit during the depths of the pandemic were largely in the rearview mirror earlier this spring. Now airlines and hotels are gearing up for a bustling summer, and a rise in bookings is driving up prices even more. Add to that airlines are not flying as much as they did pre-pandemic, so travelers can expect some full flights ahead.

Domestic U.S. fares are up 9% since April 1 while international fares are up 17%, according to research from Bernstein published this week. And fares are continuing to rise.

“For domestic travel, the June line is closest as it has ever been this past year to the prepandemic values,” the report said.

Southwest Airlines this week said leisure fares are approaching 2019 levels.

Many travelers, like Diana Desierto, are eager to visit friends and family they haven’t seen in months.

The 40-year-old, speech pathologist who lives in Baltimore, hasn’t seen her parents, sister, brother-in-law and nephews in Oakland, Calif., or her brother, sister-in-law and a niece and a nephew in Seattle since Christmas 2019.

“I have a 12-year-old nephew who had a crazy growth spurt,” she said. “Last time I saw him he was little. And [now] his voice is low.”

Desierto paid $344 for a one-way trip to Seattle and a connecting flight to Oakland in July. She used Southwest frequent flyer miles for the trip home. She said the west-bound fare was roughly in line with prices she had been used to for years though she briefly thought that “maybe no one’s flying and it would be cheaper.”

Further helping boost fares is that airlines are reinstating the strict rules on their more inflexible and cheapest fares, known as basic economy, according to Samuel Engel, head of the aviation practice at consulting firm ICF. Airlines executives have said they hope travelers avoid such fares and buy standard coach tickets, which are more expensive.

Airlines lifted the rules in the pandemic to get desperately needed travelers on board as carriers faced record losses.

“Relaxing the rules in basic economy, I’m basically giving you a $30-$50 discount,” Engel said. “The intention of basic is not to sell basic economy; it’s to bring you in the door and make you realize you don’t want it.”

Another thing driving up the cost of a trip is that more attractions like theme parks are reopening. Covid-era capacity restrictions and even masking guidelines (except during air, rail and bus travel), are lifting as well.

Destinations that for about a year had less to offer visitors than normal. Airline executives say beach, mountain and other outdoor destinations have been popular with travelers and continue to be important.

The price of a hotel in some popular destinations are even higher than before the pandemic.

Hotel rates in Cancun, Mexico were about $205 a night in early May, according to hotel data provider STR. That’s up from just $45 a year ago and $160 in 2019. In Hawaii, it was about $269, up from $122 last year and $263 the year before.

But with more reopening, other cities are recovering. Orlando hotel rates in early May were $107 a night, up from $62 last year but still below the $133 in 2019.

Even New York City, which is planning to reopen Broadway theaters in September and is now offering indoor dining, is recovering. Rooms, which were going for $123 a night last year, rose to $151 in early May — still well below the nightly rate of $269 in 2019. STR expects New York City room rates to rise to an average of $163 a night for June through August.

Fares and hotel rates are still largely below 2019 levels because business and most international travel is largely absent. That will keep a lid on prices going forward.

Some travelers have other concerns beside price: crowds.

Tom Snitzer, 64, a retired real estate developer and currently a professional nature photographer based in the Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights, said he recently flew to Atlanta for his son’s graduation from medical school.

He said it took 40 minutes to get through airport security. The Transportation Security Administration is racing to hire more screeners before the busy summer travel season.

“Everyone is packed in like sardines,” he said.

Snitzer said his travel plans are flexible but that he plans to avoid big tourist attractions, including popular national parks.

“Everyone in the world has been cooped up,” he said. “The biggest trick is to avoid everybody else, find off-the-grid spots so we don’t get trampled by tourists.”

–CNBC’s Nate Rattner contributed to this story.

Categories
World News

Pictures present rising violence amid rocket assaults

Flames and smoke rise during Israeli air strikes amid a flare-up of Israeli-Palestinian violence in the southern Gaza Strip on May 11, 2021.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that his country will step up air strikes against militants from the Gaza Strip as tensions in the region continue to escalate.

As of Monday evening, 26 Palestinians – 16 militants, nine children and one woman – have reportedly been killed in Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip. Rockets fired by militants from the Gaza Strip killed two Israeli civilians and wounded 10.

Netanyahu said the Hamas militant group that rules Gaza “will now receive blows they did not expect”.

Palestinian protesters clashed with Israeli police outside the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem on Monday, and the city has seen the worst violence in years. The mounting tensions are due to a clash of factors, including a pending ruling by the Israeli Supreme Court in a case involving right-wing Israelis attempting to evict some Palestinian residents from a neighborhood in East Jerusalem.

Smoke rises from an Israeli air strike on the Hanadi compound in Gaza City

Smoke rises during an Israeli air strike on the Hanadi site in Gaza City, which is controlled by the Palestinian Hamas movement on May 11, 2021.

Mahmud Hams | AFP | Getty Images

In response to an Israeli air strike, rockets are fired from the city of Gaza, which is controlled by the Palestinian Hamas movement

Missiles are fired from Gaza City, controlled by the Palestinian Hamas movement, in response to an Israeli air strike on a 12-story building in the city towards the coastal city of Tel Aviv on May 11, 2021.

Anas Baba | AFP | Getty Images

After Israeli air strikes, people gather at the site of a collapsed building

After the Israeli air strikes on Gaza City on May 11, 2021, people gather at the site of a collapsed building.

Mahmud Hams | AFP | Getty Images

Israeli Arabs carry the coffin of a 25-year-old Israeli Arab man who was shot dead during a riot last night

Israeli Arabs carry the coffin of a 25-year-old Israeli Arab man who was shot dead in riot last night during his funeral in the city of Lod.

Oren Ziv | Image Alliance | Getty Images

A Palestinian protester hurls stones with a sling

A Palestinian protester hurls stones with a sling next to burning tires during a protest on the border with Israel east of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on May 10, 2021.

Said Khatib | AFP | Getty Images

Rockets are being launched into Israel by Palestinian militants

Rockets will be launched into Israel by Palestinian militants from Gaza on May 10, 2021.

Mohammed Salem | Reuters

A Palestinian helps a wounded fellow protester clash with Israeli security forces at Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem

A Palestinian helps a wounded protester clash with Israeli security forces on the grounds of Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem on May 10, 2021, before a march is planned to commemorate Israel’s takeover of Jerusalem in the 1967 Six Day War.

Ahmad Gharabli | AFP | Getty Images

Soldiers work in a building damaged by a rocket from the Gaza Strip

Soldiers work in a building damaged by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip in Ashdod, southern Israel, on May 11, 2021.

Avi Roccah | Reuters

Smoke rises from Israeli air strikes in Gaza City

Piles of smoke from Israeli air strikes in Gaza City controlled by the Palestinian Hamas movement on May 11, 2021.

Anas Aba | AFP | Getty Images

Rockets are being launched into Israel from Gaza City, which is controlled by the Palestinian Hamas movement

On May 11, 2021, rockets controlled by the Palestinian Hamas movement will be fired at Israel from Gaza City.

Mohammed Abed | AFP | Getty Images

Fire billows from Israeli air strikes in Rafah, Gaza Strip

On May 11, 2021, fires from Israeli air strikes broke out in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. Israel launched deadly air strikes on Gaza on May 10 in response to a flood of rockets fired by Hamas and other Palestinian militants in rioting in the grounds of Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.

Said Khatib | AFP | Getty Images

An Israeli police bomb disposal expert looks out the window of a residential building that was damaged after being hit by a missile

An Israeli police bomb disposal expert looks out the window of a residential building damaged after it was hit by a missile fired from the Gaza Strip in Ashkelon, southern Israel, on May 11, 2021.

Amir Cohen | Reuters

A Palestinian woman cries as civilians evacuate a building that was hit by Israeli bombing in Gaza City

A Palestinian woman cries as civilians evacuate a building that was attacked by Israeli bombing in Gaza City on May 11, 2021.

Mahmud Hams | AFP | Getty Images

Israel’s Iron Dome air defense system intercepts missiles fired from the Gaza Strip

The Israeli air defense system Iron Dome intercepts missiles launched from the Gaza Strip on May 10, 2021 and controlled by the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas over the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon.

Jack Guez | AFP | Getty Images

Palestinians pray for the bodies of people killed in Israeli air strikes

Palestinians pray over the bodies of people killed in Israeli air strikes during a memorial service in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip, May 11, 2021.

Mohammed Abed | AFP | Getty Images

Palestinians stand on the rubble of an apartment that was destroyed by Israeli air strikes

Palestinians stand on the rubble of an apartment that was destroyed by Israeli air strikes in Gaza on May 11, 2021.

Mohammed Abed | AFP | Getty Images

A rabbi investigates the damage in a burning religious school in the central Israeli city of Lod near Tel Aviv

A rabbi inspects the damage in a burning religious school in the central Israeli city of Lod near Tel Aviv on May 11, 2021 after night clashes between Arab Israelis and Israeli Jews.

Ahmad Gharabli | AFP | Getty Images

A Palestinian holds a Hamas flag while walking through the Al-Aqsa Mosque after clashes with Israeli police

A Palestinian holds a Hamas flag while walking through the Al-Aqsa Mosque after clashes with Israeli police in Jerusalem’s Old City on May 10, 2021.

Ammar Awad | Reuters

An Israeli police officer holds his gun as he stands in front of an injured Israeli driver

An Israeli police officer holds his gun in hand as he stands in front of an injured Israeli driver shortly after witnesses said his car hit a sidewalk in a collision with rocks near the Lion Gate outside Jerusalem’s Old City on May 10, 2021 crashed into a Palestinian.

Ilan Rosenberg | Reuters

An Israeli man photographs a badly damaged house in the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon

An Israeli man photographs a badly damaged house in the southern city of Ashkelon on May 11, 2021, when the Hamas movement fired rockets from the Gaza Strip into Israel.

Jack Guez | AFP | Getty Images

Relatives mourn the loss of a Palestinian who was killed in an Israeli raid in Beit Hanoun in the Gaza Strip

Relatives of the Palestinian Ahmed Al-Shenbari, who was killed in an Israeli attack in the city of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip, mourn during his funeral on May 11, 2021 in Gaza City, Gaza.

Fatima Shbair | Getty Images

Categories
Politics

Why Kristi Noem Is Rising Rapidly as a Republican Prospect for 2024

It is difficult to overestimate the importance of marketing to South Dakota.

At the confluence of the Midwest and West and bifurcated by the Missouri River, the state has relied on tourism since the beginning of the 20th century when another ambitious governor, Peter Norbeck, tirelessly promoted the development of a granite monument in the Black Hills that could accommodate visitors lure to the region.

Ms. Noem has shown a similar passion for making the state a travel destination, mostly mixing tourism with politics, arranging for fireworks to be displayed at Mount Rushmore to lure Mr. Trump there last year. South Dakota similarly trumpets pheasant hunting, zander fishing, and even more blatant tourist pit stops like Wall Drug and the Mitchell Corn Palace.

“We don’t have a lot of industry in South Dakota, and we don’t have a lot of natural resources that are pumped up or extracted from the ground. So if you have a state that is basically acting and ranching, you need this. State dollars, ”said Ted Hustead, whose family owns Wall Drug, whose western collection of shops and restaurants is a major tourist attraction.

That need has put Ms. Noem in a vise over transgender legislation.

She initially said she would support the bill. But she reversed course after facing backlash from the influential South Dakota business community who feared the National Collegiate Athletic Association would pull money-making basketball tournaments out of the state.

Ms. Noem was pressured by Tucker Carlson to change her mind in a rare, controversial interview with Fox News, and the flap raised suspicion among social conservatives.

“She says whatever she thinks she says,” said Taffy Howard, a state lawmaker who has asked Ms. Noem to disclose the details of the state money she used on safety on her frequent trips. “This was about keeping their donors happy.”

The House overturned Ms. Noem’s partial veto of the trans law, but the Senate declined to take action, doomed the legislation to failure.

Categories
Health

The Rising Politicization of Covid Vaccines

President Biden on Tuesday called on governors to allow coronavirus vaccinations for all adults within the next two weeks in an attempt to hasten a goal he had previously set for May 1.

However, recent polls and political tides, especially in red states, suggest that just making the vaccine available may not be enough if the country is to achieve herd immunity. Surveys show that a sizable minority of skeptics remain cautious about being vaccinated, with questions about the safety of the vaccine at the center of their doubts.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, said the country shouldn’t expect to achieve herd immunity – where a disease effectively stops moving freely between infected people – until at least 75 percent of Americans are vaccinated.

Some states and companies are starting to treat vaccination records as a kind of passport. For example, many cruise lines require proof of vaccination for passengers, and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced last month the creation of the Excelsior Pass, which will allow citizens to easily show proof of vaccination using a smartphone. Proof of shooting is now required to enter some major venues as per current New York reopening guidelines.

But the political picture is different elsewhere. On Monday, Texas’s Greg Abbott, after Florida’s Ron DeSantis, became the second Republican governor to sign an executive order preventing state agencies and many companies from requiring consumers to be vaccinated.

Dr. Fauci made it clear yesterday that he and the Biden administration would likely stay away from it. “I doubt that the federal government will be the main driver for a vaccination pass concept,” he told the Politico Dispatch podcast. “You can make things fair and equitable, but I doubt the federal government will be the leading element of that.”

According to surveys, it could take a while to vaccinate the entire country.

Almost half of American adults said they received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to an Axios / Ipsos poll published Tuesday. However, there is reason to believe that the surge in vaccinations may soon wear off. Among those who did not get a shot, people were more likely to say they would wait a year or more (25 percent) than they would receive the vaccine within a few weeks of its availability (19 percent). Thirty-one percent of Republicans said they wouldn’t get the shot at all. Partly driving style that is deeply rooted among white evangelical Christians, a core part of the republican base. Surveys have shown that they are among the most anti-vaccine populations.

A separate survey published Tuesday by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Washington Post found that more than a third of the country has little confidence that Covid-19 vaccines have been “properly tested for safety and effectiveness.” Concerning vaccine skepticism, health workers kept an even view of the rest of the population: thirty-six percent of them were not confident.

When it comes to trust, there is no greater measure than whether you would give something to your child. Dr. Fauci has made it clear that herd immunity is not possible for young people without widespread vaccination. Therefore, every destination for the country must include these as well. But nearly half of all parents interviewed by Axios / Ipsos said they probably wouldn’t come first to get their children a vaccine as soon as it becomes available.

Fifty-two percent of respondents with a child under 18 at home said they would likely use the vaccine once their child’s age group became an option, but 48 percent said they would not.

But even as some vaccine skepticism subsides, Americans report that they get together in far greater numbers. Fifty-five percent of the country said they had been with family or friends more than at any time in the past week. 45 percent said they had recently gone out to eat.

Thirty-six percent said they had not practiced social distancing at all in the past week.

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Categories
Health

U.S. sees rising Covid instances related to youth sports activities, CDC director says

Youth hockey has had more positive coronavirus cases across the country than most sports.

Adam Glanzman | The Washington Post | Getty Images

There are increasing reports of Covid-19 cases related to youth sports in the US, said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday.

The connection between youth sports and increased coronavirus cases is that the highly infectious B.1.1.7 variant identified for the first time in Great Britain has become the most common Covid strain in the USA

There are growing numbers of Covid cases related to variant B.1.1.7 in Michigan and Minnesota, Walensky said. “Both states have concerns about transmission in youth sports, both club and sport.” connected in schools. “

“What is happening in Michigan and Minnesota is similar to what we are seeing across the country: increasing reports of cases related to youth sports,” Walensky said at a White House press conference on Covid-19 Friday.

There were 291 outbreaks in Michigan between January and March that came from youth sports teams that involved at least 1,091 people, health officials said at a separate news conference on Friday. Governor Gretchen Whitmer urged schools and clubs to pause personal exercises and games for two weeks to control the outbreak. She also urged schools to stop personal learning during this time.

In Minnesota, the B.1.1.7 strain quickly spread throughout Carver County, with at least 68 cases of coronavirus linked to participants in school and club sports activities such as hockey, wrestling, basketball, alpine skiing, and other sports, the state reported Health Department March.

A Covid outbreak at a wrestling tournament in Florida in December resulted in at least 38 coronavirus cases, according to a CDC study.

Walensky emphasized that Covid-19 cases related to youth sports are not necessarily related to an increased risk of transmission in classrooms.

“As cases increase in the community, we expect the cases seen in schools to increase too. This is not necessarily indicative of school-based transmission,” Walensky said.

“We haven’t seen any evidence of significant transmission of Covid-19 within schools once schools have fully implemented the CDC’s harm control guidelines,” she said.

The CDC director also highlighted an increase in Covid-19 cases and emergency rooms in younger adults, most of whom have not yet been vaccinated.

Categories
Business

Instances are rising as India races to vaccinate its inhabitants

A health worker delivers a dose of COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic in Bhopal, India on March 25, 2021.

STR | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

India’s Covid-19 cases are on the rise again and the country’s richest state is hit hard.

Maharashtra – home of India’s financial capital Mumbai – reported more than 248,000 new cases in just seven days, according to CNBC’s calculation of government data.

The country’s second most populous state accounted for 57% of all cases reported in India over the same period. Infection cases have increased since mid-February, but the death rate remains relatively low.

There are more than 580,000 active cases in total in India, or about 4.78% of all positive cases, according to the daily update from the Ministry of Health on Thursday. Five states – Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala, Chhattisgarh, and Punjab – account for 78.9% of all active cases in India, most of them in the western state of Maharashtra.

The Maharashtra government imposed a curfew last Sunday and banned all gatherings, including political and religious ones. A mask mandate was also enforced.

As authorities debate further restrictions to curb the spread of the virus, local media reports say a full state lockdown – similar to last year’s nationwide lockdown – may not be in sight.

Billionaire businessman Anand Mahindra, chairman of the Mumbai-based conglomerate Mahindra Group, said on Twitter this week that a lockdown would harm “the poor, migrant workers and small businesses.” Instead, he urged Maharashtra’s prime minister to focus on building hospitals and health infrastructure and avoiding Covid-related deaths.

Economic impact limited

The economic impact of the second wave of coronavirus infection in India appears to be localized for now, Citi economists said in a report this week.

“Both the geographic spread of Covid and the lower appetite of policymakers would keep the 2021 lockdowns more local and less stringent,” said economists Samiran Chakraborty and Baqar M Zaidi. They pointed out that more than half of active Covid cases are concentrated in 10 cities, eight of them in Maharashtra.

These 10 cities only account for around 10% to 12% of India’s GDP, according to Chakraborty and Zaidi.

“As such, localized lockdowns in these cities are unlikely to massively disrupt economic activity in the country,” they said, adding that they remain concerned about the contact-based service industry who are likely to suffer more due to the second wave of Covid.

The nationwide lockdown last year put India in a technical recession and disproportionately affected small business owners and workers in the informal sector. In the first wave, the infection rate peaked in September.

India is also preparing for upcoming state elections and regional festivals, which often attract large crowds, emphasized Radhika Rao, Indian economist at DBS Group in Singapore. She said increased preventive measures are needed to slow the spread of the virus.

In a recent notice, she said the ongoing vaccination campaign may act as a speed breaker to slow the outbreak.

Vaccination drive

India launched one of the largest in the world Mass vaccination campaigns in January with the original goal of vaccinating around 300 million people, including frontline workers, the elderly, and those with underlying health conditions.

From Thursday, people aged 45 and over will be able to take Covid recordings in India regardless of their state of health. Last week, Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said there were plans to expand this age group to include more people.

Health ministry data on Thursday showed India had given more than 65 million vaccine doses as of 7 a.m. local time.

At the current rate, it could take the South Asian nation 2.4 years to vaccinate 75% of its population, according to a recent report by the New Delhi-based think tank Observer Research Foundation. This is usually the minimum percentage of the population that needs to be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity at which the disease can no longer spread widely within the community.

Like most countries, India has been faced with vaccination skepticism and a range of misinformation that could potentially slow New Delhi’s vaccination efforts.

Indian Health Minister Rajesh Bhushan this week urged people over 45 to register for the vaccination and said during a press conference that “vaccine hesitation must go away”. He also reportedly urged states to step up preventive measures against lax coronavirus immediately to avoid overloading the health system with a surge in infections.

In total, India has reported more than 12.2 million cases of infection since last January and over 162,900 people have died. The majority of patients have recovered from the disease.

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Health

Covid circumstances are rising, hospitalizations have plateaued whilst vaccinations rise

Paramedic Lenny Fernandez, medical assistant Rodnay Moore, and paramedic certified Calvin Davis (left to right) prepare doses of the Pfizer COVID vaccine as the City of Vernon Health Department workers open the new clinic for the city’s mobile health unit for delivery Vaccinations used by COVID-19 against nearly 250 food processing workers at Rose & Shore, Inc. March 17, 2021 in Vernon, CA.

Al Seib | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images

Covid-19 cases are on the rise and hospital admissions in the US have increased despite the country setting a new record for coronavirus vaccine doses given in one day on Saturday.

The US had a 7-day average of 61,359 new Covid-19 cases per day on Friday, a 12% increase from last week. This comes from a CNBC analysis of the data from Johns Hopkins University.

Coronavirus daily hospital admissions steadily decreased from January to February, but now hospital admissions are on the decline. The country recorded an average of 7,790 Covid-19 hospitalizations in seven days on Thursday, up 2.6% from a week earlier. This is based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“I remain deeply concerned about this development,” said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky during a press conference at the White House on Friday. “We have seen cases and hospital admissions that have gone from historical declines to stagnations and increases. We know from previous waves that the epidemic curve has real potential to rise again if we don’t control things now.”

Europe battles third wave of Covid infections as countries like France, Poland and Ukraine reintroduce lockdowns to contain the spread of viruses.

The rising cases and stagnant hospital stays occur as more and more Americans are vaccinated. More than 3.4 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine were given on Saturday, according to the CDC. Saturday’s total broke the previous record for the most Covid-19 vaccine shots given on a day set on Friday, with 3.37 million doses reported.

The rate of vaccination is increasing rapidly with an average of seven days on Saturday of more than 2.6 million daily shots. More than 140 million Covid vaccine doses have been administered in the US since Saturday, according to the CDC.

President Joe Biden set a new goal Thursday of administering 200 million coronavirus vaccine shots in his first 100 days in office.

The urge for increased vaccinations comes from the fact that on March 19, the chief physician of the White House of the USA, Dr. Anthony Fauci, highly infectious and potentially more deadly variants of the virus continue to spread. The coronavirus variant first identified in the UK probably makes up 30% of vaccinations from Covid infections in the US

New strains are of particular concern to public health officials as they could become more resistant to antibody treatments and vaccines. Still, the World Health Organization said in February that Covid-19 vaccines had been shown to be effective in preventing serious illnesses and deaths among those infected.

Covid-related deaths in the US have decreased. According to a CNBC analysis of the Johns Hopkins data, the US recorded a seven-day average on Friday with 992 new coronavirus-related deaths per day, a 14% decrease from the previous week.

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Business

electrical vehicles face rising battery lithium nickel cobalt prices

A GM employee poses with an example of the company’s next generation lithium metal batteries at the GM Chemical and Materials Systems Lab in Warren, Michigan on September 9, 2020.

Steve Fecht | General Motors | Handout | via Reuters

BEIJING – Growing demand for electric car batteries will drive up prices for key materials, Goldman Sachs analysts said in a March 18 release.

This, in turn, will increase battery prices by about 18%, which will affect the overall bottom line of electric car manufacturers, as the battery accounts for about 20% to 40% of vehicle costs, according to Goldman analysts.

While the report did not set specific price targets for the commodities, the analyst model forecast that a return to historical highs would more than double lithium costs for electric battery manufacturers. That of cobalt would also double, while the cost of nickel would increase by 60%.

A new type of battery

The limited availability of nickel, which is suitable for car batteries, could even accelerate the switch to a different type of battery called lithium iron phosphate (LFP), the report said. Tesla and the Chinese start-up Xpeng are among the automakers who are already using this type of battery, which uses no nickel or cobalt but stores relatively less energy.

If nickel prices hit their all-time high of $ 50,000 per tonne, it could add $ 1,250 to $ 1,500 per electric vehicle, which could hurt consumer demand for cars, analysts said.

Ultimately, the growth of the electric car industry and the demand for battery materials depends on how many vehicles people buy. The tipping point for consumers to switch from gas-powered vehicles to electric cars is generally expected when battery costs are down enough.

That shift could take place in the next decade. Goldman predicts that battery costs will fall below internal combustion engines in 2030.