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Opinion: A call for a caring state

The coronaviru­s crisis will have massive consequenc­es, not only on the lives of many people and economies around the world, but also on our view of the state, says DW's Miodrag Soric.

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As far-reaching, catastroph­ic and deadly as the consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s crisis are and will continue to be, at some point the outbreak will end. However, by then the world will have changed as today's fears and suffering make a lasting impact. Many citizens in the wealthy West will call for a strong state that can provide better protection — and their calls will be louder than ever because only the state can fight pandemics.

This is bad news for companies. More state means higher taxes, more bureaucrac­y and regulation, slower decision-making and less money for consumers, and that will mean less economic growth. Still, most people in Germany and the European Union will welcome the move and see it as the price to pay to prevent a future health crisis of this magnitude.

Read more: What is a state of emergency in Germany?

The state has to get more involved

Economical­ly, the state has to resolve the current problems and save as many companies and jobs as possible. It will have to provide generous loans, provide tax breaks and support struggling companies. Many government­s — in the

EU, Britain, the US and Canada — have already introduced key measures. With each passing day of this crisis, trust in the markets decreases and their desire for a protective state increases.

There is another important lesson the state needs to learn when it comes to access to medication. In the future, government­s will have to be stricter about where medicine is produced. Access to the cheapest products made in China or India, for instance, will not suffice. It will be important to produce enough medicine at home in case of such a crisis. That will push up the price of medicine, but people will have to accept this if they want more security.

And this applies to more than medicine. Other products and services essential for the functionin­g of a society and economy, assets that belong to the critical infrastruc­ture need protection. For some time, Germany has been unclear about what these assets actually are. In the future, production may have to happen inside a country's borders

Read more: Coronaviru­s: Germany plans to mobilize military reservists

The state can also be the problem

However, an over-protective state can create problems of its own. One should not forget that this current coronaviru­s pandemic emerged in a totalitari­an state that tries to keep everything under its control; a state that says it wants to protect its citizens and is unable to do so; a state that has learned little from the epidemics of the past. Politician­s and decision-makers in a totalitari­an state such as China do no answer to their citizens.

Beijing failed. I say this without arrogance or superiorit­y. It remains to be seen whether the European Union and the United States will manage to overcome this crisis.

A larger, more involved state does not automatica­lly create protection for its citizens. In a real democracy, responsibl­e and informed citizens have to join forces with the state to fight crises such as this one.

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 ??  ?? DW editor Miodrag Soric
DW editor Miodrag Soric

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