nytimes.com 
<https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/10/us/politics/coronavirus-trump-economy.html> 
 


Torn Over Reopening Economy, Trump Says He Faces ‘Biggest Decision I’ve Ever 
Had to Make’


By Peter Baker, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Alan Rappeport

17-21 minutes

  _____  

The president suggested he wanted to move soon, but he also promised to listen 
to public health officials cautioning against relaxing restrictions prematurely.

 

Credit...Al Drago for The New York Times

WASHINGTON — As he grapples simultaneously with the most devastating public 
health and economic crises of a lifetime, President Trump finds himself pulled 
in opposite directions on what to do next. The bankers, corporate executives 
and industrialists plead with him to reopen the country as soon as possible, 
while the medical experts beg for more time to curb the coronavirus.

The phone calls from his business friends compete against the television images 
of overwhelmed hospitals. The public health experts tell him what he is doing 
is working, so he should not let up yet. The economic advisers and others in 
his White House tell him what he has done has worked, so he should begin to 
figure out how to ease up. Tens of thousands more could die. Millions more 
could lose their jobs.

“I’m going to have to make a decision, and I only hope to God that it’s the 
right decision,” Mr. Trump said on Friday during his daily news briefing on the 
fight against the coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 18,000 
Americans so far 
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/world/coronavirus-maps.html#countries>
  and put more than 16 million out of work. “But I would say without question 
it’s the biggest decision I’ve ever had to make.”

Seizing on new estimates of a lower-than-projected death toll, the president 
signaled that he wanted to start resuming business on some basis after his 
current stay-at-home guidelines expire on April 30, and he announced that he 
would name a task force next week to develop a plan. But he also promised to 
listen to public health officials cautioning against a premature move to relax 
limits.

In actuality, the decision on when and how to reopen is not entirely Mr. 
Trump’s to make because he never ordered it closed. The stay-at-home edicts 
that have kept the vast bulk of Americans indoors were issued by governors 
state by state. But the president did issue nonbinding guidelines urging a 
pause in daily life through the end of the month. And if he were to issue new 
guidance saying it was safe to reopen or outlining a path toward reopening, 
many states would most likely follow or feel pressure from their businesses and 
constituents to ease up on restrictions.

“We’re not doing anything until we know this country is going to be healthy,” 
Mr. Trump said. “We don’t want to go back and start doing it over again.” But 
he added that the nation’s current paralysis was not sustainable. “You know 
what? Staying at home leads to death also,” he said. “It’s very traumatic for 
the country.”

The number of deaths worldwide from the coronavirus topped 100,000 on Friday, 
as a surge of cases in Moscow pushed the Russian capital’s health care system 
to its limit. Lockdowns were extended across much of the globe heading into the 
Easter weekend, as countries desperately struggled to slow infections. The 
strain of people out of work and dependent on assistance was starting to show. 
A distribution of food turned into a bloody melee in a poor area of Nairobi, 
Kenya.

In the United States, the death toll has surpassed that of Spain, with only 
Italy reporting more. In Washington, lawmakers and administration officials 
made some progress in breaking a stalemate over a $250 billion federal infusion 
to replenish a fast-depleting loan program for distressed small businesses. 
Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, said that the Trump 
administration had agreed to bipartisan negotiations early next week.

But the central question dominating the conversation in Washington, New York 
and elsewhere was how long would it be until the country could begin to get 
back to normal. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York, the hardest hit state, said 
any easing of restrictions would require widespread testing to cover millions 
of workers first, while Mr. Trump said that “you don’t need full testing” but 
instead concentrated screening in the most affected areas.

New government projections presented to officials this week concluded that 
stay-at-home orders, school closures and social distancing have greatly reduced 
infections, but added that lifting them after only 30 days, as the president is 
considering, could result in a rash of new illnesses and fatalities that would 
rival doing nothing to counter the pandemic.

Without any of the mitigation policies now in place, the death toll from the 
coronavirus could have reached 300,000, according to the projections. But if 
the 30-day stay-at-home guideline is lifted, the death toll could reach 
200,000, even if schools remain closed until summer, 25 percent of the country 
continues to work from home and some social distancing continues.

Using the demand for ventilators as a stand-in for serious coronavirus 
infection rates, the model foresees a modest bump immediately after 
stay-at-home orders are lifted and a major new increase in infections about 70 
days after a shelter order is lifted, peaking after 120 days. The projections, 
dated Thursday, were prepared by the Departments of Homeland Security and 
Health and Human Services 
<https://int.nyt.com/data/documenthelper/6874-fema-coronavirus-projections/1e16b74eea9e302d8825/optimized/full.pdf#page=1>
  and obtained by The New York Times.

These numbers fueling the projections may already be out of date. Forecasts 
accepted by the White House that once estimated at least 100,000 deaths in the 
United States have now been revised to about 60,000 thanks to aggressive social 
distancing. But if the numbers are off, the direction and increases may be 
consistent.

The government models show a rise in demand for ventilators 120 days after 
lifting stay-at-home restrictions that would be more severe than if the United 
States had never issued such orders in the first place and instead relied 
simply on school closures, sending people home to telework and directing the 
public to socially distance.

Christopher Murray, the director of the Institute for Health Metrics and 
Evaluation at the University of Washington whose forecasts have been relied on 
by the White House, added a warning against lifting restrictions too soon. 
“It’s enough to say that if we were to stop at the national level May 1, we’re 
seeing a return to almost where we are now sometime in July,” he said on CNN.

At his briefing on Friday, Mr. Trump said he was not aware of the government’s 
own latest forecasts, but aides said he had interpreted the decreasing death 
projection to mean that his health advisers may have been overly pessimistic.

The president cited the 60,000 estimated death toll as evidence of progress. “I 
think we’ll be substantially under that number,” he said of the earlier 100,000 
forecast. “Hard to believe that if you have 60,000, you can never be happy, but 
that’s a lot fewer than we were originally told.”

But his public health advisers took a more cautious approach. “As encouraging 
as they are, we have not reached the peak,” Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White 
House pandemic coordinator, said of the latest figures. She noted that without 
universal testing, experts were seeing only the most serious cases. “Is this 
the tip of the iceberg, or is this half the iceberg or three-quarters of the 
iceberg that we’ve seen to date?” she said.

Five administration officials said it was highly unlikely that Mr. Trump would 
extend the guidelines beyond April 30, adding that he would be more likely to 
find a way to announce some lifting of quarantine measures, even if it might 
not be a full flip-the-lightswitch reopening of the country.

Mr. Trump has been having conversations, both formally and informally, in 
recent weeks with business leaders like Michael Corbat, the chief executive of 
Citigroup, and Brian Moynihan, the chief executive of Bank of America, about 
how to support the economy and when it might be able to reopen.

Many of those discussions have been facilitated by Treasury Secretary Steven 
Mnuchin, who has fielded calls from executives like Stephen A. Schwarzman, the 
chief executive of Blackstone, looking for a road map to when a semblance of 
normalcy could return, although some people close to the discussions said that 
Mr. Schwarzman and Steven Roth, a real estate investor close to Mr. Trump, have 
not been aggressive as others.

Other business executives have gone through Jared Kushner, the president’s 
son-in-law and senior adviser. Paul Tudor Jones made an impassioned push to 
reopen the economy on a conference call organized by Mr. Kushner several weeks 
ago, these people said, and the investor Nelson Peltz was said to be 
influential in Mr. Trump’s since-aborted plan to begin reopening by Easter.

Lobbying groups have become more vocal about the need for the administration to 
create a plan for the reopening of the economy.

“The longer we stay shut down, the worse off people will be and the harder it 
will be getting the economy going again and getting people jobs so they can go 
back to work,” said David McIntosh, the president of the Club for Growth. “What 
we need now is a plan for when we reopen the government, because the plan curve 
has been flattened.”

Some business leaders have been particularly frustrated that the government is 
not being realistic about the economic consequences of the fight against the 
coronavirus. They note that there are many health risks and that not all of 
them warrant shutting down the economy.

Jacob Wintersteen, a real estate developer in Texas and the finance chairman 
for the Houston area for the state’s Republican Party, said businesses should 
have the right to operate if they see fit despite the risks. “People in front 
of my face are watching their businesses be destroyed by our choice of the 
cure,” he said.

The president’s economic advisers have been laying the groundwork for reopening 
the economy. Larry Kudlow, the chairman of the National Economic Council, said 
this week on the Fox Business Network that he could envision returning to work 
on a rolling basis within the next four to eight weeks. Mr. Mnuchin said on 
CNBC that it could happen as soon as May 1.

However, people close to Mr. Mnuchin have suggested that a more gradual 
timeline for reopening the economy could begin in May based on the availability 
of coronavirus testing and regional case numbers. Mr. Kushner and Peter 
Navarro, the president’s trade adviser, likewise have talked about opening in 
stages as quickly as possible, fearing that banks will start having real 
problems if the lockdown continues through May.

Economists say that lifting restrictions, particularly on nonessential 
businesses, will restore a limited amount of activity to an economy that is 
currently in a free fall.

But some of the president’s advisers like Marc Short, the chief of staff to 
Vice President Mike Pence, have argued that, ultimately, business leaders will 
not wait for health professionals or administration officials once new 
infections and deaths start to decrease and may simply reopen their firms.

Many experts caution that growth will be slow when it returns because people 
will be wary of resuming normal activities before the country has far more 
extensive testing.

Without widespread confidence in returning to work or other public activities, 
any economic recovery could be tepid. A survey of business leaders and market 
participants this week by S&P Global found that only 12 percent of respondents 
believed the economy would make a “quick complete recovery” soon.

A quick restart, though, could carry risks for the economy. If the government 
tells Americans to return to normal life and infections rise again, that could 
wipe out consumer optimism and lead to a longer, more damaging recession.

“It’s not clear to me that the pandemic’s direct effect on the economy will end 
in June” or anytime close to that, said Karl Smith, the vice president for 
federal policy at the Tax Foundation in Washington. “Even after official 
restrictions are lifted, lots of people may be uncertain about jumping back 
into ordinary life. Companies may be uncertain about putting their workers at 
risk.”

Reporting was contributed by Eileen Sullivan, Jim Tankersley and Annie Karni 
from Washington, and Kate Kelly and Andrew Ross Sorkin from New York.

  _____  

 

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