China Daily (Hong Kong)

US working on boosting relief funds

White House and Congress in talks; Treasury chief upbeat on recovery

- By ANDREW COHEN in New York and ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington Nation, Face the Contact the writers through andrewcohe­n@chinadaily­usa.com. Pan Mengqi in Beijing and Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

While expressing optimism that the economy will improve later this year, White House officials are involved in informal talks with Congress to approve another round of coronaviru­s relief legislatio­n, officials said on Sunday.

“The reported numbers are probably going to get worse before they get better,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Fox News on Sunday, adding: “We’ll have a better third quarter, we’ll have a better fourth quarter, and next year is going to be a great year.”

Officials in the administra­tion of the United States, including Mnuchin and White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow, said they were holding discussion­s with lawmakers on issues including potential aid to states whose finances have been devastated by the pandemic.

As of early Monday, the US had recorded 79,528 deaths in the outbreak, with the number of cases surging to near 1.33 million.

US President Donald Trump said on Friday that he is “in no rush” to negotiate another stimulus package, as the Labor Department reported that unemployme­nt rose to 14.7 percent in April, the worst figure since the Great Depression.

Over the past two months, the White House and bipartisan coalitions in Congress have approved $3 trillion in spending to help companies, workers and the unemployed.

Pressure for further action may intensify as the near-term economic picture worsens. On CBS’

Kevin Hassett, another White House economic adviser, said the unemployme­nt rate could rise to somewhere “north of 20 percent” in May or June before the economy moves into what administra­tion officials have said will be a robust recovery in late 2020.

On the medical front, a US news magazine said the official data on COVID-19 reported by US media is “a messy undercount of the real picture of the pandemic situation”, leading to questions over the reliabilit­y of the data.

Flawed processes

The official data are “untrustwor­thy” because of the “flawed” processes of collecting the data, The Atlantic said in an article on its website.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, says it “does not know the exact number of COVID-19 illnesses, hospitaliz­ations, and deaths for a variety of reasons.”

It also says that in the event of a discrepanc­y between CDC cases and those reported by state and local health authoritie­s, “data reported by states should be considered the most up to date.”

However, even states that frequently publish such data do not all record or report data with the same level of standardiz­ation, US media said.

“Far from being exaggerate­d, experts believe the true number of people who have died from COVID19 is actually higher than what’s been reported,” said a HuffPost report on Sunday.

Currently, many media outlets refer to data collected by research institutio­ns. In addition to the Johns Hopkins University data, they also cite figures provided by Worldomete­r, which is run by an internatio­nal team of developers, researcher­s, and volunteers. NBC and some other news outlets have their own COVID-19 case trackers.

As for coronaviru­s testing, which is essential for states to make decisions on lifting stay-at-home orders and reopening businesses, media outlets are relying on the data provided by the Covid Tracking Project, a volunteer organizati­on launched by The Atlantic.

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