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Childhood friends from Wellesbourne complete charity challenge

Childhood friends from Wellesbourne complete charity challenge
kenilworthweeklynews.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kenilworthweeklynews.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Life may get back to normal this year But the economy probably won t

It's tempting to think now that 2020 is over, the economy will soon snap back to normal. But that's still far off: Americans aren't spending as much as they used to. Millions remain unemployed. For an economy that runs on consumer spending, that's a huge issue. The recovery and the return to public life hinges on the coronavirus vaccine rollout. It could take much of 2021 for most Americans to get inoculated, however, and that means life won't change for many households any time soon as people who can continue to work from home and some schools remain shuttered.

Pandemic demographics complicate debt metrics: Mike Dolan | Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide

By depressing world birth rates and population projections further, the still-raging pandemic may also damage the ability of economies to grow their way out of the additional debt piles COVID-19 has foisted upon them. A report by HSBC this week said the pandemic’s impact on falling birth rates could weaken the pace of global population .

Pandemic showcases corner of Europe derided by Trump advisers

Here s the Overlooked Demographic Problem Caused by the Covid-19 Pandemic, Says HSBC Economist

By Steve Goldstein Order Reprints Text size Gresie Elfin Siahaan holding her newborn baby Bellvania Magdalena Sianturi at the RSIA Tambak maternity clinic in Jakarta, Indonesia, on May 11, 2020. AFP via Getty Images There is a looming demographic problem being created by the coronavirus pandemic. As unfortunate as they are, it isn’t the deaths some 361,000 in the U.S. and 1.9 million globally, according to the tracker from Johns Hopkins University. Rather, it is the declining birthrate. James Pomeroy, a London-based economist for HSBC, says the birthrate would only have to drop by 1.5% to match the number of deaths from the pandemic. But past pandemics and other natural disasters and recessions suggest the birthrate will fall between 10% and 15% in 2020 and 2021.

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