As stock markets fall, the time to stock up at the store is before COVID-19 comes to town: Don Pittis - Action News
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As stock markets fall, the time to stock up at the store is before COVID-19 comes to town: Don Pittis

There are few signs of COVID-19 spreading in Canada. But experts say empty store shelves are a reminder the time to act is before an emergency hits.

Empty shelves in places the virus hits are a reminder to prepare for emergencies

Traders work on the floor Tuesday at the New York Stock Exchange, where the Dow Jones fell another three per cent as financial fears of the new coronavirus spread. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters)

Stocks markets fell sharply for a second day around the world in response to new signs that the COVID-19 virus is spreading outside China.

But while investors did not want stocks again yesterday, people in the parts of northern Italy now facing an outbreak of the new coronaviruswere anxious to stock up on food.

Experts who watched grocerystoreshelves empty first in Wuhan, China, then in other places where the virus seems to be spreading widely say the time for Canadians to get ready for an emergency is before it happens. And that means even if it never happens.

The inability of households to get the goods they need represents a fundamental breakdown of theeconomic system, but it is merely a visible sign of trouble in the supply chain that applies across the economy, says Amin Mawani, who teaches at York University's Schulich School of Business in Toronto.

"When you see empty store shelves, you often thinkabout consumers," said Mawani, whose research includes how companies cope with employee absenteeism. "Corporations and business also find a lack of similar supplies."

Preparation makes an economic difference

He saysthat the masks considered most effective against the virus are already unavailable from Canadian retailers, and that in the 2003SARS epidemic, hand sanitizer was sold out for months.

"We have to prepare across governments, across communitiesand as families and individualsin the event of more widespread transmission in our community," said Canada's chief public health officer,Theresa Tam, on Monday.

Mawani says that when consumers and businesses prepare ahead of time, it really makes an economic difference.

While so far, therehas been at least onereportof COVID-19spreading from person to person among close contacts in this country, outbreaks in Italy, South Korea and Iran are an early warning of what the World Health Organization director general recently referred to as "the spark that begins the bigger fire."

That bigger fire is the moment when an epidemic in a few countries becomes a worldwide pandemic. But even if the virus never comes to your town, there are good economic reasons for consumers and businesses not to wait until it does.

"Absolutely, they should be thinking ahead," said Darryl Culley, president of the consultancyEmergency Management & Training.

Based in Barrie, Ont., the company has a team of experts to help businesses and public sector groups plan for the unknown.

Prepare for self-sufficiency

"In the event of a major emergency, regardless of the type here in Canada it could be an ice storm, on the West Coast it could be an earthquake, it could be a pandemic people need to be prepared to be self-sufficient for a period of time,"said Culley.

Preparing for an emergency should not be confused with "prepper" culture, the survivalist outlook that saw Saskatoon's Iris Sparrow die at 79with an accumulated $20,000 worth of dried food in her basement.

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Dr. Michael Gardam of Toronto's Humber River Hospital says we all need to get ready for the virus gaining a foothold in Canada.

Even if the current virus were to spread aroundthe world, previous experience, including the 1918flu pandemic,shows thateventually, the overall economy will adapt and bounce back, although Mawani notes that some businesses, including restaurants, did not survive in 2003.

He says parts of theeconomy may also change. As anexamplehe cites an increase in telecommuting in China that may become permanent once it has been tried for several months and found effective.

An empty street is seen after a coronavirus outbreak, in Milan, Italy this week. The economic effect spreads ahead of the virus. (Flavio Lo Scalzo/Reuters)

Disasters in the news elsewhere can help remind people to plan ahead, including stocking up on essentials. But the example ofhurricane season on the eastern seaboard, when shoppers strip the shelves of everything from dog food to toilet paper, shows people tend to ignore warnings until the last minute.

"That's why you see shelves going bare very quickly," said Culley.

And that's economically inefficient. Gradually stocking up on things you might need to get you through a hypothetical quarantine means grocerystores will have time to adjust supplies, reducing the chances of empty shelves later.

Culley saidthat sincepower and water should not be aproblem during a disease outbreak,ready-to-eat canned goods could be supplemented with grain and beans as a longer-term safety net. As long as it is kept dry and safe from pests,a bag of white rice will last for up to30 years and still taste good, says a report from Utah State University.

Keeping employees healthy

While food and medicine are essential for household emergency preparation, plans for keeping the economy functioning while people are sick or in quarantine arealso essential.

"Businesses need to have a pandemic plan, and it needs to be done in advance, not at the time of the threat," said Culley, who says he has been getting an increasing number of inquiries aspublic concern over of the epidemic rises.

Among the strategies to keep operations running during a pandemic is imagining how tomake the organizationcontinue to function whenone-third of staff is sick or in quarantine. That involves creating a complex plan that includestraining people to do one another's jobs and thinking about how employees could work from home.

The primary goal for employers, said Mawani, is to keep employees healthy, because as well as potentially saving lives, workersare essential to a company's financial health. And as SARS showed, even if the transmission of a disease is under control, the economic effect spreads much more widely.

"The financial contagion of an outbreak like this is always muchmore significant thanthe health contagion," he said.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis