- by New Deal democrat
Today is a travel day for me, so I’ll keep this relatively brief.
- by New Deal democrat
Today is a travel day for me, so I’ll keep this relatively brief.
- by New Deal democrat
Initial jobless claims rose 27,000 to 229,000 last week, continuing above the recent 50+ year low of 166,000 set in March. The 4 week average also rose 8,000 to 215,000, compared with the all-time low of 170,500 nine weeks ago. Meanwhile continuing claims were unchanged at 1,306,000, tied for a 50 year low:
In any event, yet more (slight) weakening in the economic indicators, and yet more reason for concern as we get to 2023. A few weeks ago I went on “Recession Watch” beginning with Q1 2023 and noted that, because I rely in large part on Prof. Geoffrey Moore’s long leading indicators, which also were the basis for ECRI’s forecasts (the last time they were public about their metrics), I expected ECRI to start talking about recession as well.
Well, within the past week, via a Lakshman Achuthan interview on CNN, they have.
- by New Deal democrat
Last week the CDC update showed variant “Ba.1.1.526” increasing quickly to 6.6% of all cases. Although they did not note it, I wrote that this was almost certainly Ba.4/5; they simply had not made the change yet.
Well, this week they did. This morning’s “nowcast” update of variants shows Ba.1.1.526 having vanished, with Ba.4/5 having taken its place, and having doubled to 13% of all cases in the past week, even as Ba.2.12.1 slowly increased from 59% to 62%:
Here’s the regional breakout:
Ba.2.12.1 now makes up a little over 80% of cases in NY, NJ, and PR, while BA.4/5 combined make up 18% of all cases in the northern Rockies and 22% of the southern Plains, including Texas.
It is unclear it this point how much, if at all, nationwide cases will increase. It depends on how much Ba.2.12.1 fades compared with how quickly Ba.4/5 take over. In South Africa, the Ba.4/5 wave rolled in and out very quickly earlier this spring:
- by New Deal democrat
The economic calendar is very light this week, with no significant news until Thursday, so let’s take this opportunity to update the situation with COVID-19.
First, as of one week ago subvariant BA.2.12.1 continues to increase very slowly its share of overall cases, up to 59% nationwide:
This subvariant makes up 78% of cases in NY and NJ, but only 38% in the Northwest. Meanwhile new subvariants BA.4/5 (still listed as BA.1.1.529 by the CDC) has risen to 6.1% of all cases, with a high of 12.4% in the northern Great Plains, and a low of 2.9% in NY and NJ:
The BA.2.12.1 wave appears to have peaked 8 days ago, at 115,700 cases. It is presently down to 106,800. Meanwhile deaths have *still* continued to decline from their Omicron peak of February, making a new 10 month low of 258 on June 3rd:
Hospitalizations have continued to increase, up to just over 29,000, compared to their low of 10,264 on April 6:
The trend of COVID not being nearly so lethal as it was originally (regardless of the causation) continues. Two really important trends stand out.
The first is that we are now more than 2 full months after the post-Omicron trough, and yet deaths have continued to ever so slowly decline, as noted above making a new low just a few days ago. Typically, as is shown in the chart below, hospitalizations have made peaks and troughs simultaneously with or just slightly after cases, while deaths make equivalent peaks or troughs within 3-4 weeks later:
Event Peak | Cases Date | Hosps Date | Deaths Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alpha | 1/11/21 | 1/9/21 | 1/13/21 | |
Delta | 9/5/21 | 8/27/21 | 9/21/21 | |
Omicron | 1/15/22 | 1/15/22 | 2/1/22 | |
BA.2.12.1 | 6/3/22* | N/a | N/a | |
Event Trough | ||||
Alpha | 6/21/21 | 6/25/21 | 7/8/21 | |
Delta | 10/26/21 | 11/5/21 | 11/27/21 | |
Omicron | 4/4/22 | 4/6/22 | 6/3/22* | |
BA.2.12.1 | N/a | N/a | N/a | |
--- | ||||
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So the fact that deaths are *still* declining more than 2 months after cases started to rise again speaks of a big change having happened.
Secondly, when we look comparatively at hospitalizations and deaths vs. confirmed cases, we see that with each successive wave, there are fewer hospitalizations vs. confirmed cases, and even fewer deaths.
The below chart norms the “Alpha” wave of winter 2020-21 to 1.00 for all metrics, and then compares successive peaks and troughs of subsequent waves with that respective peak and trough.
Note that, with one exception (hospitalizations due to Delta at peak), hospitalizations rose less and fell more than cases did during each successive wave after Alpha. Deaths have declined comparatively even more:
Event Peak | Cases # (Thous.) | Hosps. # (Thous.) | Deaths # (Number) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alpha | 1.00 (251.8) | 1.00 (117.7) | 1.00 (3,393) | |
Delta | 0.66 (166.2) | 0.74 (87.4) | 0.62 (2,117) | |
Omicron | 3.21 (807.8) | 1.31 (154.0) | 0.77 (2,609) | |
BA.2.12.1 | 0.46* (115.7) | 0.25* (29.0) | N/a | |
Event Trough | ||||
Alpha | 1.00 (11.5) | 1.00 (13.1) | 1.00 (223) | |
Delta | 6.17 (70.9) | 2.71 (35.5) | 3.68 (821) | |
Omicron | 2.32 (26.7) | 0.77 (10.3) | 1.16* (258) | |
BA.2.12.1 | N/a | N/a | N/a | |
--- | ||||
--- | ||||
At the peak of Omicron in January, more than 3x as many people had confirmed cases as compared with Alpha, but there were only 1.3x as many hospitalizations, and less than 0.8x as many deaths.
As of the most recent post-Omicron trough, cases were still nearly 3x as high as the post-Alpha trough, but hospitalizations made a new all-time low of .77x compared with the post-Alpha trough, and deaths - still declining as of a few days ago - are less than 1.2x as many as the post-Alpha trough.
Probably the recent relative decline is hospitalizations is due more than anything else to Paxlovid, which when taken promptly after the onset of symptoms, has been very effective.
When it comes to deaths, the causation may be one or more of many things: an inherent weakening of the successive variants, resistance due to the prevalence of vaccinations and/or previous infections in the population, more effective treatments in the hospital, or simply that the most vulnerable population already died of the disease, so there are many few extremely susceptible individuals left - or something else, or any combination of the above.
But, whatever the reason, COVID now has the approximate fatality rate as a typical bad flu season. I expect new variants and new waves of COVID to continue, but appears more and more likely that it is ever so gradually transforming into an endemic condition.