Congress has appropriated
more than $2 trillion to compensate for the loss of jobs and income caused by
the COVID-19 pandemic. The spending is unprecedented, greater even than the
recovery spending after mortgage markets collapsed in the 2008-09 Great
Recession.
Among those receiving funds
from Congress’ pandemic spending are laid-off workers, businesses unable to pay
workers, individual taxpayers (at the rate of $1,200 each or $2,400 per couple)
and big corporations, which lobbied Congress and the Trump administration to
let them in on the largesse, too. Even state governments, usually tight-fisted
and operating under a balanced budget mandate, have opened their coffers to
provide funding to people and businesses insufficiently helped by federal money.
Now, nearly four months
after the COVID-19 virus became a household phrase and shoppers panicked and
cleaned shelves of toilet paper and other essential items, elected officials
are wondering whether this unprecedented spending will be enough to compensate
all (or nearly all) Americans for what they lost because of a virus neither
they nor their government agencies could predict or subdue.
There are other losses
besides the monetary ones. People are dying because of this pandemic. Earlier
this week, deaths from COVID-19 topped 80,000 in the United States. No one
thinks the virus will stop there.
Each death is a tragedy.
Each needless death resulting from poor healthcare, lack of insurance, uncaring
others who ignored precautions such as washing hands, cleaning counters, social
distancing and wearing face masks, or stay-at-home orders is doubly tragic.
Nothing can bring back those who were lost in the pandemic, and that leaves a
vacuum felt for years by friends and relatives.
Pandemic rules make each
death more tragic. Funerals are either limited or forbidden. No one can get a
proper sendoff, a comforting farewell, a shared mourning because of limits on
crowd sizes.
High school and college
seniors are being denied the usual capstone of their studies, a graduation
ceremony. Although high school and college leaders have provided recognitions
of their graduating class, a neighborhood parade or a sign in the front yard
just isn’t the same as that walk across the stage. Some college athletes are
missing their last chance at stardom.
Even more disappointed are
engaged couples who have planned a wedding months in advance, put down payments
on reception catering and venues, plus honeymoon trips. Restrictions on crowds
and uncertainties about travel will force them to postpone their ceremony and
honeymoon.
Similarly, families who
planned vacation trips a year in advance (not an unusual practice) have had to
cancel their long-awaited travel, hope for refunds and deal with it if refunds
are declined. For many, a 2020 trip was to be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,
a bucket list item. It may be possible to shift some trips to a year later, but
for some people, this year’s vacation loss is permanent. Several years ago, a
friend with a debilitating and ultimately fatal disease scheduled a series of
trips to check off his bucket list of places he had always wanted to see. In
2020, such once-in-a-lifetime trips won’t be possible.
For some people of a certain
age, a dream trip canceled this year might be a last chance. A year from now, they
might not have the mobility, strength or stamina for such a trip.
We all know that there are
some things money can’t buy. There are some things for which no government
stimulus can compensate: a life ended too soon, a life-mark ceremony postponed,
a long-nurtured dream denied, a life-changing opportunity canceled. Stimulus
money can’t make up for the disappointments, the postponements, the tragedies
this pandemic has wrought.
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