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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Apr 9 2020

Full Issue

Poorer Countries Losing Out In Race To Secure Medical Supplies

In Africa, Latin America and parts of Asia, where health care systems are underdeveloped, medical professionals also find they can't compete for much needed supplies with richer countries. The outcome for those countries is potentially catastrophic, health officials say. Other global news reports on the deluge of aid requests to the IMF and World Bank, aid packages in the U.S., Europe and Japan, a positive update on Boris Johnson and the "chilling'' number of deaths in France's nursing homes.

The New York Times: In Scramble For Coronavirus Supplies, Rich Countries Push Poor Aside

Crates of masks snatched from cargo planes on airport tarmacs. Countries paying triple the market price to outbid others. Accusations of “modern piracy” against governments trying to secure medical supplies for their own people. As the United States and European Union countries compete to acquire scarce medical equipment to combat the coronavirus, another troubling divide is also emerging, with poorer countries losing out to wealthier ones in the global scrum for masks and testing materials. (Bradley, 4/9)

The Wall Street Journal: IMF, World Bank Face Deluge Of Aid Requests From Developing World

The health of the global economy comes down to a race between money flooding out of emerging markets amid the coronavirus pandemic and the efforts of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank to pump money back in. The two Washington-based finance institutions find themselves facing the greatest challenge since they were established as the heart of the international monetary system at the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference. The IMF’s seminal mission was to safeguard global financial stability to prevent a repeat of the Great Depression, while the World Bank’s was to rebuild the war-ravaged economies of Europe. (Zumbrun and Harrison, 4/9)

The New York Times: While The World Spends On Coronavirus Bailouts, China Holds Back

The world is opening its wallet to fight the effects of the coronavirus outbreak. The United States unveiled a $2 trillion rescue package. European countries have announced their own spending blitz, and Japan approved a nearly $1 trillion economic stimulus plan. Then there’s China. The country that famously helped kick-start the world economy after the 2008 global financial crisis with a half-a-trillion-dollar spending splurge has been relatively restrained this time around. While it is helping companies keep workers and pushing its state-run banks to lend more, China has held back from spending on big packages or flooding its financial system with money. (Bradsher, 4/9)

The New York Times: As Europe Confronts The Coronavirus, What Shape Will Solidarity Take?

As a poorer, battered south asks a richer, frugal north for solidarity, you’d be forgiven for thinking the coronavirus is throwing Europe back into last decade’s economic catastrophe. You’d be wrong. This time is set to be far worse. The pandemic and the havoc the coronavirus is wreaking on European economies has echoes of the eurozone debt crisis, but this calamity is hitting everyone, not just smaller wayward nations, and it goes well beyond the economy. It presents a watershed moment for the future shape of the European project. (Stevis-Gridneff, 4/8)

Reuters: PM Johnson 'Getting Better' In Intensive Care As UK Extends Overdraft

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was getting better on Thursday in intensive care where he is battling COVID-19 as his government extended its overdraft facility and reviewed the most stringent shut down in peacetime history. Johnson, 55, was admitted to St Thomas’ hospital on Sunday evening with a persistent high temperature and cough and was rushed to intensive care on Monday. He has received oxygen support but has not been put on a ventilator. (Faluconbridge, Holton and Milliken, 4/9)

Politico: France Struggles With ‘Chilling’ Covid-19 Data From Nursing Homes

Even though older people are most at risk of developing COVID-19, French health authorities have struggled to get data on the spread of the coronavirus from a key source: nursing homes. Weeks into the epidemic and shortly after a new reporting system was implemented, health officials raised concerns with Prime Minister Edouard Philippe's office about the difficulties they face with private care facilities for the elderly, according to internal emails seen by POLITICO. (Braun, 4/8)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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