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Unemployment in the US is swelling to levels last seen during the Great Depression of the 1930s, with 1 in 6 American workers thrown out of a job by the coronavirus, according to new data released on Thursday, 23 April.
In response to the deepening economic crisis, the House passed a nearly USD 500 billion spending package to help buckled businesses and hospitals.
More than 4.4 million laid-off Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week, the government reported.
In the hardest-hit corner of the US, evidence emerged that perhaps 2.7 million New York state residents have been infected by the virus – 10 times the number confirmed by lab tests.
A small, preliminary statewide survey of around 3,000 people found that nearly 14 percent had antibodies showing they had been infected, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.
Just in New York City, with a population of 8.6 million, Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot said as many as 1 million may have been infected.
In Washington, many House lawmakers wore face masks and bandannas and some sat in the otherwise vacant visitors gallery to stay away from others as they debated the latest spending package.
A near-unanimous vote sent it to President Donald Trump in the evening.
Abroad, there was mixed news about the epidemic. Some countries, including Greece, Bangladesh and Malaysia announced extensions of their lockdowns.
Vietnam, New Zealand and Croatia were among those moving to end or ease such measures. In Africa, COVID-19 cases surged 43% in the past week to 26,000, according to John Nkengasong, director of the Africa Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
The figures underscored a recent warning from the World Health Organisation that the virus could kill more than 300,000 people in Africa and push 30 million into desperate poverty.
Brazil's health ministry confirmed 407 deaths due to the outbreak in the last 24 hours, a daily high for the country.
Huge lines have formed at food banks from El Paso, Texas, to the Paris suburbs, and food shortages are hitting Africa especially hard.
At a virtual summit, European Union leaders agreed to set up a massive recovery fund to help rebuild the 27-nation bloc's ravaged economies. While no figure was put on the plan, officials said 1-1.5 trillion euros (1.1-1.6 trillion USD) would be needed.
The true numbers are almost certainly far higher.
In the US, the economic consequences of the shutdowns have sparked angry rallies in state capitals by protesters demanding that businesses reopen, and Trump has expressed impatience over the restrictions.
Some governors have begun easing up despite warnings from health authorities that it may be too soon to do so without sparking a second wave of infections.
In Georgia, gyms, hair salons and bowling alleys are likely to re-open on Friday. Texas has re-opened its state parks.
Few Americans count on Trump as a reliable source of information on the outbreak, according to a survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
About 23% said they have high levels of trust in what he tells the public, while 21% said they trust him a moderate amount.
On the economic front, few experts foresee a downturn as severe as the Depression, when unemployment remained above 14% from 1931 to 1940, peaking at 25%.
Janet Simon, laid off as a waitress at a Miami IHOP restaurant, said she has just USD 200 and is getting panic attacks because of uncertainty over how she will care for her three children.
Simon, 33, filed for unemployment a month ago, and her application is still listed as pending. I'm doing everything to keep my family safe, my children safe, but everything else around me is falling apart, Simon said.
But they see it, no matter how much I try to hide my despair."
Corey Williams, 31, lost his warehouse job in Michigan a month ago and saw his rent, insurance and other bills pile up while he anxiously awaited his unemployment benefits.
That finally happened on Wednesday, and he quickly paid USD 1,700 in bills. It was getting pretty tight, pretty tight, he said. It was definitely stressful for the last few days.
In northern Colorado, a major meatpacking plant that closed because of an outbreak that claimed the lives of four workers was set to reopen Friday after a two-week disinfection, even as some questioned how employees can maintain social distancing inside the facility.
(Published in arrangement with PTI)
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