ADVERTISEMENT

Virus Lockdown Cut Movement 89% in Peru, Double Rate of Mexico

Virus Lockdown Cut Movement 89% in Peru, Double Rate of Mexico

(Bloomberg) -- Data from Google show that Peru has done a better job than its neighbors in enforcing controls to curb the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

Trips to cafes, supermarkets and parks all plunged as the nation implements some of Latin America’s toughest lockdown rules. Visits and length of stay in categories including retail, recreation and workplaces fell by an average of almost 90% in the Andean nation on April 5, according to Google’s Covid-19 mobility report.

This contrasts to Mexico and Brazil where the gauge has fallen by less than half as Presidents Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador and Jair Bolsonaro both took a more relaxed attitude toward stay-at-home policies.

Google says it produces the reports with aggregated, anonymized data from users who have turned on the “location history” setting on their phones.

Virus Lockdown Cut Movement 89% in Peru, Double Rate of Mexico

Social mobility has also fallen by more than 60% in Colombia, Nigeria, Argentina, Malaysia, Philippines, India, South Africa and Turkey. The measures will carry a high cost, according to a report by Citigroup Inc.

“Economies under tighter social distancing may experience more negative shock in domestic sector than others,” Citi economists wrote in a report summarizing Google’s findings.

The International Monetary Fund now forecasts that global gross domestic product will shrink 3% this year, with the Latin America and Caribbean region contracting by more than 5%.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.