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Why The Coronavirus Recession Is Unlike Any Other - YouTube
Channel: CNBC
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The Coronavirus pandemic is putting an end to the longest economic
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expansion in U.S.
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history. We are going into a global recession.
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We're in an economic downturn.
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The world is now in recession.
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Recession in the next quarter or two because everything is shutting down of
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course. As millions of us remain under orders to stay home, factories have
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closed and businesses have shut down.
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Entire parts of the U.S.
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economy are at a complete standstill.
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This is an extraordinary disruption.
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It's almost like a meteor hit the entire planet.
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And we have to now deal with the fact that we've been knocked off our
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axis. The Federal Reserve and Congress are taking extraordinary steps to
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try to keep the economy afloat.
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Still, economists warn this recession will be unlike other downturns in
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recent history because it was spawned by a health crisis, not by an
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unhealthy economy.
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We may well be in recession, but again, I would point to the difference
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between this and a normal recession.
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This isn't, there's nothing fundamentally wrong with our economy.
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So why is the coronavirus pandemic causing a recession and how long will it
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last? In technical terms, economies enter a recession after
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two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth.
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Now the U.S. government isn't scheduled to release first quarter GDP data
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until the end of April and second quarter data until July.
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So it'll be a while before the official verdict is in.
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But many economists are already predicting double digit declines in GDP
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growth in the second quarter of the year.
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The biggest quarterly decline we've seen an annualized GDP growth was in
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1950 and that was 10 percent.
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Most estimates now are for well over 10 percent.
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This is probably gonna be the worst we've ever seen.
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Based on a range of other indicators, many economists agree the U.S.
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has already entered a recession.
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The first place we can see recessions signals is in the jobs market.
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Industries like retail restaurants, air travel and hotels had laid off
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thousands of workers as business has stopped.
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Nearly 10 million Americans filed for unemployment insurance claims during
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the final two weeks in March, the highest level on record after they were
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let go from their jobs as their employers dealt with the impacts of the
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virus. Some economists predict the unemployment rate could spike from
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three and a half percent in February to 15 percent by the middle of the
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year. The labor market is really a reflection of the broader economy, and
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we're seeing a lot of signs that we're having a massive increase in
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unemployment. Surveys of businesses and consumers are also pointing to a
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recession. One March survey found U.S.
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companies reported the steepest downturn in economic activity since 2009.
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Both the services and manufacturing sectors of the economy tumbled.
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Some companies were already suffering from a supply shock after China shut
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down factories earlier this year because of the Coronavirus.
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Now, the U.S. economy is also suffering from a lack of demand as consumers
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stay home. This drop in demand is reflected in the price of oil, which is
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near its lowest level in nearly two decades.
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Meanwhile, wild swings in the stock market also have Americans worried
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about their savings and retirement accounts.
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There's no way to sort of even get the calculus on how big of a disruption
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this is, because it's really bringing the major parts of the U.S.
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economy to a virtual standstill.
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Some economists are looking to alternative sources of data to gauge the
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economic impact of the Coronavirus pandemic.
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One early indicator is consumer spending at restaurants.
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This chart shows restaurant reservations through open table in five
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countries, including the U.S.
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declined 100 percent during two weeks in March.
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Consumer spending is over two thirds of the U.S.
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economy. You knock out the consumer and you knock down the economy in an
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extraordinary way. We're not only knocking out the consumer, we're
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shutting down factories.
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There is no precedent for a crisis like this.
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These dire economic forecasts and dramatic moves in the stock market have
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led some to believe this crisis could be worse than the financial crisis
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that started in 2007 or maybe even than the Great Depression.
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Depressions last much longer than recessions.
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The Great Depression went on for more than a decade.
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Former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke studied the Great Depression
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extensively and says the Coronavirus crisis is different.
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This has some of the same feel, some of the feel of panic, some of the feel
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of volatility that you're talking about.
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But it's it's really it's much closer to a major snowstorm or natural
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disaster than it is to a classic 1930s style depression.
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The main reason this economic downturn is different than many others is
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that it's not the result of instability in the financial system like we
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saw in the banking sector in the 1930s, the dot com bust in the 2000s or
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the housing sector in the mid-2000s.
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Instead, it's the result of measures needed to contain a health crisis
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like social distancing and isolation.
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The most important differences this comes out of the real economy,
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something biological.
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And people's choices with responding to that and not out of financial
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excess. In the words of the current Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell
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there was no fundamental problem with the economy when the virus hit.
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This is a situation where people are being asked to step back from economic
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activity, close their businesses, stay home from work.
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Many economists say the challenge is to prevent the coronavirus health
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crisis from turning into a prolonged financial crisis.
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The risk is that a health crisis, something that through small businesses
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out of business overnight, something that threw workers, millions of
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workers out of work overnight.
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A health crisis could become a Great Depression if we don't deal with it
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now and provide that support to get through this period of time and have a
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recovery on the other side.
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Policymakers in Washington have taken big steps to try to reduce the
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economic harm of the Coronavirus pandemic.
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On March 15th, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates to zero.
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It also announced it would buy $700 billion in treasuries and mortgage
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backed securities in an attempt to push down longer term rates.
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As the central bank has continued to buy more assets since then, the value
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of its balance sheet exceeded five trillion dollars for the first time
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ever. They have cut the cost of funding about as low as it can go, and
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hopefully that does translate into lower mortgage rates, lower auto loan
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rates and things that should help the economy when we get to the other
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side of this of this hump.
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The Fed has also launched emergency programs to make sure other central
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banks and financial institutions have enough cash on hand.
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The first and most important thing they're doing is providing dollar
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liquidity. So not just in the U.S., but around the world.
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When there's a crisis of real crisis, people want to have dollar cash on
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hand. The Fed's actions are mainly intended to keep credit markets running
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smoothly so that the economy can bounce back once the pandemic ends.
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There are limits to what the central bank can do while consumers and
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businesses are on lockdown.
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No one's going to open houses right now.
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No one's going to auto dealer lots.
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But if those rates stay low, when when we can all leave our houses in the
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summertime, hopefully, you know, then maybe you will be more incentivized
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to buy that car or that house.
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You can't force the economy to grow through this means.
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That's why every central banker from Jay Powell on down is saying you need
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fiscal policy right now.
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Congress is in charge of that fiscal response.
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At the end of March, lawmakers passed a record 2 trillion dollar stimulus
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package. It included direct payments to individuals, additional
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unemployment insurance benefits, loans for small businesses and funding
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for industries like airlines.
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I think what they have done has been a good a good first step, but they
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should be prepared to do more.
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Economists say the action that policymakers take now will help determine
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how long the coronavirus recession lasts and how quickly the U.S.
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economy can recover.
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Many agree that the first step on the road to recovery is containing the
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spread of the virus.
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If you can get the biology under control, then the economy can start to
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recover. Some like to think of economic recessions and recoveries in terms
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of the letters V U or L.
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V is a quick rebound in growth where consumer and business activity
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surges after a downturn.
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U means a slightly longer downturn followed by a recovery.
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L is the worst case scenario, a long, slow recovery like the one we saw
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from the financial crisis.
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Goldman Sachs, for example, predicts a V-shaped recovery from the
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coronavirus, with GDP dropping as much as 34 percent in the second quarter
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and rebounding 19 percent in the third quarter.
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This will be a very deep recession in terms of GDP loss and job loss.
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And the question is, when we get to the other side and when the virus
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passes, how you know, how fast to how speedy is the recovery.
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Businesses' abilities to stay solvent while they're closed is one factor
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that will affect the shape of the recovery.
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Another factor is how quickly Americans who are laid off will be able to
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get their jobs back. And if the relief from policymakers will be enough to
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get them through prolonged uncertainty.
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There's also the question of how quickly consumers are willing to go back
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to their normal activities even after the virus has been contained.
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Nothing is going to force the people of the world to suddenly start flying
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airplanes again. Nothing's going to force the people of the world to
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suddenly start crowding into stadiums again.
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Some are raising alarms that Congress and the Fed are risking another
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crisis by increasing debt and deficits with their stimulus measures.
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But as the human costs of the pandemic continues to mount, policymakers
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and economists say that the focus for now should be on providing relief to
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workers and to companies so that the economy can bounce back.
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You can't put this in the framework of other recessions.
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This is hitting us on so many different sides and could metastasize into
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something that is literally viral for the economy as well, and that the
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whole point is to survive this and come out healthy on the other side.
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