With more and more people getting vaccinated each day, America is rapidly ramping up its protection against Covid-19.
What might that mean for U.S. cities and metropolitan economies? trib.al/DpUVxiO
During the 1918 flu, cities with aggressive lockdowns recovered fastest. M.I.T. researchers found that shutting down public places led to a higher rebound in manufacturing employment:
🚫Taverns
🚫Restaurants
🚫Other public spaces for extended periods trib.al/DpUVxiO
📈Researchers recently projected that demand for healthcare professionals in U.S. cities will increase post-pandemic.
📉But demand for service-industry workers — office support, customer service, food service, food processing and so forth — will decline trib.al/DpUVxiO
If they’re right, we could witness some dramatic economic restructuring over the next decade.
Cities such as New York, Boston and San Francisco that have strong foundations in technology, healthcare and education should return to health quickly brookings.edu/research/in-so…
Metro areas such as Las Vegas or Orlando — where growth in recent years has been driven more by tourism and hospitality — may struggle to keep pace trib.al/DpUVxiO
Brookings notes that the pandemic exposed our heavy reliance on…
More than 22 million U.S. workers in such jobs — nearly half of all low-wage workers — earned a median wage under $15 per hour trib.al/DpUVxiO
Clearly, Americans deeply undervalue many of the jobs and industries that are critical for our economy to function.
Whether or not we strengthen the economic power of this essential class may well define our nation’s economy for a generation trib.al/DpUVxiO
Which cities recover depends on how we choose to treat Americans struggling to enter the middle class.
If we stay on the same policy path, the trends that have long favored the tech-focused knowledge economy will continue to prevail after the pandemic trib.al/DpUVxiO
A tech-focused knowledge economy will almost certainly add to the widening economic inequality we’ve seen since the 1980s, with advances in automation — some pioneered under the pressure of Covid-19 lockdowns — eliminating even more service-sector jobs trib.al/DpUVxiO
Many Sun Belt metros have created middle-class jobs in the energy, hospitality and food-service industries over the last 40 years.
They may begin to confront some of the same challenges that have ravaged the Rust Belt trib.al/DpUVxiO
The point isn’t to save all those service-sector jobs threatened by automation.
It’s to raise workers already performing essential tasks into the middle class, by paying them wages commensurate to their value to the economy trib.al/DpUVxiO
The middle class we wish to have in America — and the one we need to maintain the vibrancy of U.S. cities — is already here.
It’s just not recognized as such by the nation’s business leaders and policymakers trib.al/DpUVxiO
Workers in hospitality, customer service and food service, healthcare, and other vital industries require much more than our gratitude.
They need bold policy actions to raise incomes and increase job security trib.al/DpUVxiO
Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan pushes middle-class security in the right direction.
It’s a bold gambit to stimulate the U.S. economy. It should also be a blueprint for how we establish social priorities for our post-pandemic future trib.al/DpUVxiO
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There’𝘀 been a ton of innovation in onlin𝗲 escape rooms over the last year.
Now, we’re joining in the fun, too! Your mission — should you choose to ac𝗰ept it — is t𝗼 escape this Twitter thread
🔑🔑 To do that, you’ll need to fi𝗻d and interpret two hid𝗱en “keys.”
Each 𝗸ey is a pair of words, and putting thos𝗲 words together will reveal the wa𝘆 out. Once you find the escape path, it will lead you to a secret location, the name of which is the final answer
Everything 𝗶n the thread i𝘀 fair game as a 𝗵iding spot — the clues to the keys could be anywhere 𝗶n the text, or even in other parts of the threa𝗱 like that picture in the secon𝗱 tweet.
Sixty years ago today, the first man orbited space.
Yuri Gagarin became an icon, taking the front pages by storm in an unparalleled PR win for the Soviet Union. Today, space lore remains powerful in Russia trib.al/5ySQzhO
Moscow naturally named its first approved coronavirus vaccine after Sputnik, the satellite whose launch in 1957 terrified the Western world.
At least six major inquiries in the past two decades have examined various aspects of race in Britain.
All of them found evidence of institutional racism, including four since 2017. Boris Johnson’s Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities begs to differ trib.al/EdTkKyq
The commission was launched after the Black Lives Matter protests last year.
In a new report, controversial conclusions say that while it’s too early to declare Britain a “post-racial society,” arguments of institutional racism are overblown trib.al/EdTkKyq
According to the report, the U.K. is pretty much best in class when it comes to White-majority countries around the world.
The message of “cheer up, things are better than you think” won't be the comfort the government hopes, says @ThereseRaphael1trib.al/EdTkKyq
According to the WHO’s recent investigation into the
pandemic's origins, Covid-19 likely started this way too.
Some governments have expressed concerns about this inquiry — but there’s no denying that the threat of zoonotic diseases is real and urgent bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
China, whose legal wildlife trade was estimated to be worth $80 billion in 2016, should be at the center of efforts to prevent this.
The government already banned the breeding and sale for consumption of most terrestrial wildlife, but it’s not enough bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
Following pandemic news too closely can be an emotional roller coaster, with dire public health warnings immediately followed by hopeful new studies.
Here’s a hopeful new study: Vaccines sharply cut all Covid-19 infections — not just symptoms trib.al/O7A3VUE
The new data were collected from 4,000 people who were vaccinated with the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines between December 2020 and March 2021. The group was made up of:
👩🏽⚕️Health care workers
🚑First responders
🥡Delivery workers
👨🏼🏫Teachers trib.al/O7A3VUE
The participants were asked not only to monitor symptoms but also to test themselves weekly.
The study authors concluded the vaccines caused a 90% reduction in all infections. If people aren’t getting infected, they can’t transmit the virus to others trib.al/O7A3VUE
This week, Volkswagen taught us how not to do an April Fool’s Day joke.
It also provided us a lesson in just how difficult it is to emulate Elon Musk trib.al/VRBiCHj
Here’s the lowdown if you haven’t heard:
⚡️VW’s U.S. arm claimed it was changing its corporate name to “Voltswagen”
⚡️Denied it was an April Fools’ Day joke
⚡️Then admitted that it actually was an April Fools gone wrong
VW has been riding a wave of investor excitement about its electric cars.
Thanks in part to some clever marketing, it seemed to have cracked Elon Musk’s knack for share-price boosting publicity. VW preference shares are close to a six-year high trib.al/VRBiCHj