You're wrong (and I try to be conservative with this impolite expression). This could have been Spanish flu level, had it not been for the fact that we are 100 years later (with all its benefits).
It's pure/easy math: any virus than grows exponentially and kills 3% of infected is trouble. We got lucky with the swine flu (H1N1, now part of the yearly flu season), we may get lucky with this one, too.
That doesn't change the fact that we will have been LUCKY, not GOOD. One day, that will end, if we're not careful; and that's why civilized nations keep pandemic experts/preparation in their budgets, the way we keep a military. It's not a question of IF, it's a question of WHEN.
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Companies have spent the years since the global financial crisis binging on debt. Now, as the coronavirus pandemic threatens to push the world into recession, the bill could come due — exacerbating damage to the economy and feeding a meltdown in financial markets.
www.cnn.com
Scariest part for me is a chain reaction, which has happened with the oil industry
Wars aren’t fought with tanks and troops these days, they’re fought economically