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“Andreas Kluth is a member of Bloomberg's editorial board. He was previously 
editor in chief of Handelsblatt Global and a writer for the Economist.”


This Pandemic Will Lead to Social Revolutions
As the coronavirus sweeps the world, it hits the poor much harder than the 
better off. One consequence will be social unrest, even revolutions.

Andreas Kluth
April 11, 2020, 1:00 AM EDT

The most misleading cliche about the coronavirus is that it treats us all the 
same. It doesn’t, neither medically nor economically, socially or 
psychologically. In particular, Covid-19 exacerbates preexisting conditions of 
inequality wherever it arrives. Before long, this will cause social turmoil, up 
to and including uprisings and revolutions.

Social unrest had already been increasing around the world before SARS-CoV-2 
began its journey. According to one count, there have been about 100 large 
anti-government protests since 2017, from the gilets jaunes riots in a rich 
country like France to demonstrations against strongmen in poor countries such 
as Sudan and Bolivia. About 20 of these uprisings toppled leaders, while 
several were suppressed by brutal crackdowns and many others went back to 
simmering until the next outbreak.

The immediate effect of Covid-19 is to dampen most forms of unrest, as both 
democratic and authoritarian governments force their populations into 
lockdowns, which keep people from taking to the streets or gathering in groups. 
But behind the doors of quarantined households, in the lengthening lines of 
soup kitchens, in prisons and slums and refugee camps — wherever people were 
hungry, sick and worried even before the outbreak — tragedy and trauma are 
building up. One way or another, these pressures will erupt.

The coronavirus has thus put a magnifying glass on inequality both between and 
within countries. In the U.S., there’s been a move by some of the very wealthy 
to “self-isolate” on their Hamptons estates or swanky yachts — one Hollywood 
mogul swiftly deleted an Instagram picture of his $590 million boat after a 
public outcry. Even the merely well-heeled can feel pretty safe working from 
home via Zoom and Slack.

But countless other Americans don’t have that option. Indeed, the less money 
you make, the less likely you are to be able to work remotely (see the chart 
below). Lacking savings and health insurance, these workers in precarious 
employment have to keep their gigs or blue-collar jobs, if they’re lucky enough 
still to have any, just to make ends meet. As they do, they risk getting 
infected and bringing the virus home to their families, which, like poor people 
everywhere, are already more likely to be sick and less able to navigate 
complex health-care mazes. And so the coronavirus is coursing fastest through 
neighborhoods that are cramped, stressful and bleak. Above all, it 
disproportionately kills black people.
 
Even in countries without long histories of racial segregation, the virus 
prefers some zip codes over others. That’s because everything conspires to make 
each neighborhood its own sociological and epidemiological petri dish — from 
average incomes and education to apartment size and population density, from 
nutritional habits to patterns of domestic abuse. In the euro zone, for 
example, high-income households have on average almost double the living space 
as those in the bottom decile: 72 square meters (775 square feet) against only 
38.

The differences between nations are even bigger. To those living in a 
shantytown in India or South Africa, there’s no such thing as “social 
distancing,” because the whole family sleeps in one room. There’s no discussion 
about whether to wear masks because there aren’t any. More hand-washing is good 
advice, unless there’s no running water.

And so it goes, wherever SARS-CoV-2 shows up. The International Labor 
Organization has warned that it will destroy 195 million jobs worldwide, and 
drastically cut the income of another 1.25 billion people. Most of them were 
already poor. As their suffering worsens, so do other scourges, from alcoholism 
and drug addiction to domestic violence and child abuse, leaving whole 
populations traumatized, perhaps permanently.

In this context, it would be naive to think that, once this medical emergency 
is over, either individual countries or the world can carry on as before. Anger 
and bitterness will find new outlets. Early harbingers include millions of 
Brazilians banging pots and pans from their windows to protest against their 
government, or Lebanese prisoners rioting in their overcrowded jails.

In time, these passions could become new populist or radical movements, intent 
on sweeping aside whatever ancien regime they define as the enemy. The great 
pandemic of 2020 is therefore an ultimatum to those of us who reject populism. 
It demands that we think harder and more boldly, but still pragmatically, about 
the underlying problems we confront, including inequality. It’s a wake-up call 
to all who hope not just to survive the coronavirus, but to survive in a world 
worth living in.


https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-04-11/coronavirus-this-pandemic-will-lead-to-social-revolutions


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