Hartford Courant

Omicron spreads doubt for pandemic recovery

Many stay home while others try to carry on amid canceled shows, empty eateries

- By Paul Wiseman and Anne D’innocenzio

Just as Americans and Europeans were eagerly awaiting their most normal holiday season in a couple of years, the omicron variant has unleashed a fresh round of fear and uncertaint­y — for travelers, shoppers, partygoers and their economies as a whole.

The Rockettes have canceled their Christmas show in New York. Some London restaurant­s have emptied out as commuters avoid the downtown. Broadway shows are canceling some performanc­es. The National Hockey League suspended its games until after Christmas. Boston plans to require diners, revelers and shoppers to show proof of vaccinatio­n to enter restaurant­s, bars and stores.

A sense of anxiety has begun to erode the willingnes­s of some people and some businesses to carry on as usual in the face of the extraordin­arily contagious omicron variant, which has fast become the dominant version of the virus in the United States.

Other people, though, are still traveling, spending and congregati­ng with other people as they normally do, though often with a cautious wait-and-see perspectiv­e. Holiday air travel remains robust. Many stores and restaurant­s are still enjoying solid sales.

And omicron has yet to keep audiences away from movie theaters in significan­t numbers. This past weekend, record audiences across all demographi­cs flocked to theaters for the new “Spider-man” movie.

“The movie theater has not yet been hindered by omicron,” said Steve Buck, the chief strategy officer of Enttellige­nce.

At the same time, no one knows yet what omicron will ultimately mean for the health of the Western economies, which have endured a wild ride of downturns and recoveries since early 2020.

“These mutations keep coming,” said Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance. “What is the probabilit­y that sometime we get a really nasty one? No one has any idea. This thing is mutating, and it’s very hard to say.”

Will omicron cause outbreaks at factories and ports, disrupt operations and worsen supply chain bottleneck­s that have forced up prices and contribute­d to the hottest U.S. inflation in decades?

Will it mean people will hunker down at home again and spend less on services — restaurant meals, concerts, hotel stays — which could weaken the economy but potentiall­y defuse inflationa­ry pressures?

Will return-to-office plans for white collar workers be put on hold, deepening the hit to many downtown businesses?

Or will omicron prove a blip that scarcely slows what has become a surprising­ly strong recovery from the short but intense pandemic recession?

Spooked by uncertaint­y and fear of the worst-case scenarios, stock markets around the world sold off for three days before rebounding Tuesday.

“We don’t know whether this is good or bad for growth or inflation in the medium term,” said Megan Greene, global chief economist at the Kroll Institute. “We just don’t have enough data yet.”

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