The Star Malaysia

Lockdown works, but it destroys jobs

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THE nation is coming out of another hard lockdown and signs show it may have succeeded in putting a stop to an alarming resurgence in coronaviru­s infections.

The latest Health Ministry figures showed that the number of daily Covid-19 cases was down to about 8,000 in the past two days, from as high as 15,000 in recent weeks.

The virus is also not spreading as fast as it used to, according to data crunchers.

However, the cost has been devastatin­g to an economy that ratings firm Moody’s believes is already in a “worrisome state”.

Hospitals are still filled to the brim. There have been gut-wrenching stories of patients dying in makeshift tents and inside their cars because hospitals are inundated with patients and running short of rooms and resources to treat them.

With close to 900,000 infections and more than 15,000 dead, the Philippine­s has the second-worst outbreak in South-East Asia, after Indonesia.

The government’s main economic planning agency said that while the two-week lockdown managed to prevent about 260,000 new infections and some 4,000 deaths, it also led to at least 130,000 workers in Metro Manila alone losing their jobs and 50,000 more going hungry.

Since the pandemic slammed the brakes last year on the Philippine­s’ remarkable growth story, more than four million Filipinos remain without jobs while close to eight million have had to take pay cuts from shorter working hours.

The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority estimates that each worker has seen his pay shrink by 23,000 pesos (RM1,890) since various forms of quarantine restrictio­ns were put in place in March last year.

Winifred Bagyosa, 53, a barber who works for a large chain of men’s salons, said he again had to go for two weeks without earning a cent because of the latest lockdown.

He gets paid a small, basic salary, but his main income is dependent on how many customers sit on his chair for a haircut and the tips they give him.

“So, no work, no pay,” he said. He said he and his wife have had to again lean on their adult children, who are themselves hard up and trying to supplement their income by selling food online.

The country’s economic managers have been pushing hard to relax quarantine restrictio­ns to revive a crippled economy.

Economic Planning Secretary Karl Chua has been arguing that Covid-19 infections had been contained even after the government allowed more companies to reopen and more workers to come to work in October last year.

He said this was proof that there is a way to safely reopen the national economy via “localised lockdowns, for instance, even with the new variants causing infections to spike”.

“The issue we face now is not economy versus health,” he added.

“It is the total health of the people, whether from Covid, non-Covid sickness, or hunger.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Makeshift rooms: A health worker cleaning a Covid-19 quarantine facility in Manila.
— Reuters Makeshift rooms: A health worker cleaning a Covid-19 quarantine facility in Manila.

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