San Antonio Express-News

EU warns jump in COVID infections could harm recovery

- By Raf Casert

BRUSSELS — A massive spike in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks is threatenin­g the European Union’s recovery from the deep economic slump caused by last year’s onset of the pandemic, the bloc’s economy chief said Wednesday.

And medical experts warned that the public health situation could get much worse.

Only two weeks ago, the EU executive raised its growth forecast for an economy bouncing back from the worst of the pandemic. But EU Economy Commission­er Paolo Gentiloni said Wednesday that the upbeat picture was now in doubt again amid rising infections and with restrictio­ns being reintroduc­ed in a growing number of member states.

The fear is that the fall forecast for 5 percent growth this year in the 19-nation eurozone could still be hurt by the end-of-year virus crisis.

“Our only message is: Take the situation very seriously,” Gentiloni said, “but without thinking that the economic impact will be the same one as one year ago.”

Medical experts warned of more hardship ahead and called for urgent measures that could affect crucial sectors such as the restaurant, bar and tourism industries, already badly hit by the virus last year.

The European Center for Disease Prevention and Control said in a report Wednesday that burden from the highly contagious delta variant first detected in India “is expected to be very high in December and January” unless drastic government action in taken and vaccinatio­ns tick further upward.

It all goes against initial expectatio­ns for the holiday season, when it was thought that Europeans

unburdened by COVID-19 restrictio­ns would dip into their forced savings of the past year and spend, giving the economy a major shot in the arm.

Now, the ECDC warned, “the end-of-year festive season is traditiona­lly associated with activities such as social gatherings, shopping and traveling, which pose significan­t additional risks for intensifie­d transmissi­on of delta.”

ECDC Director Andrea Ammon spoke of health systems already being overwhelme­d in some EU nations and others being close to this. “We have to take it now really serious in the sense that measures have to be applied in order to reduce transmissi­on,” Ammon said.

But in the past, this has meant lockdowns and wholesale closures of businesses that were responsibl­e for the unpreceden­ted economic slump.

Ammon was addressing everything from less intrusive measures such as mandatory maskwearin­g or remote work to lockdowns.

“We still have some time until Christmas,” Ammon said. “But if the situation doesn’t get better, it might mean that these measures should be taken over Christmas as well.”

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