In our part of the world, Easter time
is about a renaissance. That’s a very appropriate moment to talk about the
future. The public message must be inspired by prudent optimism. It´s good politics
to describe the possible scenarios ahead of us. And give people more
information about recovery plans. People appreciate being treated as adults,
as responsible citizens. There is too much talk about the pandemic and not
enough about the actions that will be supported during the recovery phase. Let’s
move from fear to resilience. Leaders must share a vision that brings hope and
shows to everyone they know what they intend to do, once the public health
menace is under control. To narrate a vision will also help the leaders to
sharpen their views on the policies that are required. A vision is not about
wishful thinking. It is about what one sees as the situation after the crisis.
It has a powerful positive effect on everyone, including on the leadership
itself.
Saturday, 11 April 2020
Friday, 10 April 2020
The Security Council and the pandemic
Yesterday, the UN Secretary-General addressed
the Security Council on the Covid-19. It was the right move because the
pandemic is not just a global health problem but also a serious threat to international
peace and security, as well as a major humanitarian challenge for less
developed States. I recommend an attentive reading Mr Guterres’s remarks. They are
very thorough. The link is as follows:
China, Russia and South Africa adopted
a very similar line of response to the Secretary-General. They basically stated
that Covid-19 is a public health issue and therefore it should not be discussed
in the Council.
That’s a very narrow approach. It’s
terribly wrong. They know it, but their main concern was to avoid a political discussion
that would give the UN some room for a more active and comprehensive role. That
has confirmed a trend we know well: to keep away from the Security Council the
most strategic issues the world is confronted with. And to marginalise the UN
Secretariat when it is in their own interest, as major countries.
Thursday, 9 April 2020
Optimism
It requires an enormous effort to be
positive in today’s situation. We see the number of victims, we read the stories
of their suffering, we watch the unemployment figures shooting to the stars, the
immense level of poverty that goes along, we think of people we have known in
Africa and elsewhere in the least developed economies, and wonder how can they
survive on daily basis, we are told of perfectly viable companies going to the
rocks, and all the rest, and we get depressed. But we must convince ourselves
that sooner we will be able to contain the pandemic – to contain, as a first
stage, before we eliminate it – and that normalcy will be invited back. We do
not really know what type of normality that will be, people talk about a
changed society, but as soon as people feel free to take care of their lives we
might see a big leap forward, a renewed level of energy. I think we have here
an opportunity to come out of it wiser. And that makes me feel a bit optimist.
Wednesday, 8 April 2020
The African situation
My friends all over Africa tell me
that the pandemic is gaining ground in several countries. There are lockdowns
in place in some cities. The big problem is that the national health structures
have very limited capacity to deal with Covid-19. It all starts with the means
of testing. And then, the treatment, the conditions in the hospitals, the
shortage of medical staff at every level. There have been some figures about the
number of cases. But the tally is far from being reliable.
Leading people in those countries are
looking in the direction of China. For them, China could be a model and a
source of help. They are also very surprised as they see European nations,
developed societies, struggling to respond to the challenge. They can’t
understand the difficulties the Europeans meet. They thought that a situation
of that type would never happen in Europe. The European image is losing
sharpness and light in the African circles. That is one of the consequences of
the pandemic.
The ordinary African citizen,
particularly those in the big metropolis, have very little space for social
distancing. That notwithstanding, I have seen pictures of empty cities throughout
the Continent. People know what is at play. And they try to take it as
seriously as their living conditions allow them to do it. I have a deep admiration
for them. They are, in many cases, the poorest of the poor, they must fight
every day for their own economic survival, but they are showing a good measure of
responsibility.
One of things that must be placed back
on the agenda, once we start getting out of these troubling times, is the
relationship between Africa and Europe. Both sides have a lot to gain from a stronger partnership. And, as I said several times, we can include the Chinese
in the equation. They will gain a lot as well, if we are all together.
Monday, 6 April 2020
Boris Johnson and Covid-19
Wishing a speedy recovery to Prime
Minister Boris Johnson of the UK. He has been transferred this evening to
intensive care because of the coronavirus. This sad moment sends a very strong
message to the population. The coronavirus is a very threatening disease and
people must follow all the official protocols the health authorities have
adopted. The Prime Minister is a strong person, not old at all, and surrounded
by the best medical care one can get. Notwithstanding all that, he is
struggling. He has been sick for eleven days or so. If that can happen to the
leader of the UK, we must pay a lot of attention to the virus. This is no small
matter.
Sunday, 5 April 2020
Bamako sunset
Thanks to a friend and the digital technology,
I could watch the sun setting below the horizon of Bamako, the capital of Mali.
The Niger River reflected the last rays of light of the day and sent me a
message of beauty, tranquillity and vastness. Not far, the image showed one the
arteries of the city, as busy as it is customary on a Sunday end of the
afternoon. We talked about the virus – five registered deaths so far in the
country. But we know how difficult it is to record the true cause of death in a
country like Mali. Fine. The important point, for me, was to learn that life
goes on as usual in the city and elsewhere. The UN mission, and the embassies,
are following the prevention protocols. But the ordinary Malian is focused on
what keeps him busy every day: to find enough resources to buy food and other
basic needs; and to worry about the security of his family and his own,
especially in the central and northern regions of the country. And those
concerns are there to stay. People have very little time for the virus, as they
had no time for the legislative elections that took place last weekend. The turnout
in Bamako was around 10%. That says a lot. And it reminds us that we might live
in a global village, but some corners of that village spend their time just trying
to survive, virus or no virus.
Saturday, 4 April 2020
Our daily dose of fear
In my area of the city there is one big
supermarket. I go there every Thursday morning, for the weekly shopping. And
sometimes, one more time, for some item that might be needed and was left out
of the weekly list. During the last two or three weeks, I noticed that the number
of people inside the supermarket is much smaller. Not because of any entry
control, let me add. It all starts at the underground parking. Nowadays, it’s
much easier to find a good spot for the car. I should add that most of those
shopping on Thursday in morning are older customers, retired people. I am told
they are afraid of spending time in the big shop. And today, as I was chatting
over the phone with a friend, I got the confirmation that there are many people
– and more so now, as the bad figures keep increasing – who are simply afraid
of any contact, even a distant one, with other shopping fellows. And I said to
myself that we are living in very strange times, when the simple act of moving
along the wide aisles of a supermarket is seen as a dangerous exercise.
Friday, 3 April 2020
What lies ahead is simply unique
The economic dimension of the crisis
is huge. That’s now obvious to everyone, as the figures about unemployment and
temporary layoffs become known. And that explains the gigantic size of the
recovery programmes that have been announced. The amounts are just mind-boggling,
difficult to imagine, because of the large number of zeros that follow the
initial figure. Hundreds of billions, many of them close to trillion figures, or
even above, as it is the case in the US. We are talking about funds that are
simply not available. They will have to be printed.
It is a dramatic situation to many
families and a move to extraordinary levels of indebtment by the States, the
corporations and firms, and the families. Large amounts of debt, both public
and private, were already a key feature in many countries. Our economies have
been in the red for several years. But the previous debt levels will look as
small fish when compared with the numbers in the next phase, the recovery
phase. Most of that debt will be untenable and will have to be write off,
sooner or later. That will cause major changes in wealth ownership. The point
will be to manage such transition in a way that would avoid the ruin of key
sectors of the economy, including the pension mechanisms, the banking and
insurance systems, the bond and the property markets.
It is indeed a completely new ball
game. We will have to play it and keep defining the rules as we move on. It
will require an extraordinary level of international cooperation. That means
wise leadership, plenty of foresight and political courage. Unfortunately, wise
leadership seems to be a dimension that is seriously absent in the current
international relations scenario. In my opinion, that’s one of the key risks
that can seriously disrupt the next stage of our life in this small planet. These
will be exceptional times.
Thursday, 2 April 2020
Beyond the facts
Today I give everyone a break. There is no writing about the pandemic. No
word about the crisis millions are facing. No mention of the economic collapse
we are witnessing. Let’s be light today. It’s better for our own mental health.
Wednesday, 1 April 2020
The UN's appeal must be heard
The UN Secretary-General launched
yesterday an appeal for funds to help the developing countries to tackle the
Covid-19 pandemic and to finance their socio-economic recovery. António
Guterres stated very clearly that this pandemic is by far the deepest crisis
the world has faced since World War II. It has many dimensions and all of them tremendously
affect the weakest people in the poorest countries of the world. The amount he
deems necessary is about $8 trillion US, meaning 10% of the global GDP.
I agree with the Secretary-General’s
analysis, approach and amount he is looking for. But I am extremely pessimist
as it regards to the response the richest countries will provide. Every country,
in the better off regions of the world, is desperately looking for resources to
deal with the impact of the Covid-19 within their own borders. The call for international
solidarity is a distant call. It will not be heard. The developing world will
be left to its own fate.
The developing countries that were
better connected to the global economy will gradually re-establish those connections.
It will take time for different reasons. The logistical chains of supply have
been seriously disrupted, the demand in developed economies will remain weak
for a good period and there will be an attempt to produce locally what was up
to now imported from afar. International trade might take a new shape, to operate
within smaller circles of nations.
The countries that were outside the
global sphere of production and commerce will continue to struggle at subsistence
level. Poverty will continue to be as widespread as it is now. The opportunities
to go beyond the local level will not open. And we can easily guess that international
cooperation and aid priorities will go further down in the multilateral agenda.
In both cases, food production for
local consumption will become the central concern. Any assistance to the
agricultural sector will make a difference. The other concern will be to
maintain peace and security in societies that have been profoundly
de-structured and further impoverished.
The media that matters is too busy with
the Covid-19 progression in the most developed societies to give any serious
echo to Antonio Guterres’s appeal. No media attention means additional hurdles
in terms of money mobilisation.
Independently of the success of this initiative, the Secretary-General did the right thing. He must be the moral voice of those who are too far from the wealthy and the powerful to be heard.
Independently of the success of this initiative, the Secretary-General did the right thing. He must be the moral voice of those who are too far from the wealthy and the powerful to be heard.
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