Clive Crook, Columnist

The Fog Surrounding the Coronavirus Economy

The latest official projections are more pessimistic than those of private analysts.

Adjusting to the coronavirus economy. 

Photographer: Rich Fury/Getty Images North America
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

Just how serious will the economic impact of the coronavirus be? Amid vast uncertainty, some very large numbers are flying around, and there’s a lot of confusion over what they mean. Peering through this fog, it’s worth noting: Authoritative official forecasters are far more pessimistic in the short term than most private-sector analysts.

My colleague Justin Fox recently drew attention to one persistent source of muddle about the numbers — namely, the U.S. habit of annualizing quarterly rates of growth. When Goldman Sachs, for instance, recently said output would fall by 34% in the second quarter, it meant that it would actually fall by around 10%. (The bigger number is what the annual decline would be if that quarterly rate persisted for a whole year.)