Baromètre

Covid-19: Numbers of new Covid-19 cases in Europe are picking up once again

25/09/2022
PDF

3.4 million new Covid-19 cases were recorded worldwide from 14–21 September, a fall of 4% compared to the previous week. This is the smallest decrease since August last year. All regions of the world are affected with the notable exception of Europe, which recorded an increase for the first time since last July (an 18% rise, chart 1). Of the 3.4 million new cases making up the worldwide total, 1.3 million were reported in Europe (38.2% of all cases). The highest number of new cases was recorded in Russia (416,078), followed by Germany (263,773), France (210,586) and Italy (130,764). In other parts of the world, the trend is still downward, with falls in South America (-27%), Africa and Asia (-15%) and the United States (-8%). In addition, vaccination campaigns continue to be rolled out in countries throughout the world (chart 2). However, the pace of vaccination has slowed recently.

Visitor numbers to shops and recreation facilities remain at pre-Covid levels in Italy, though they recently fell back below this threshold in Belgium, France and Germany. On the other hand, numbers are still below this level in the other countries included in our sample (Spain, Japan, UK and US) (chart 3, blue curve).

The weekly GDP proxy indicator continues to weaken in the European countries included in our sample (Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, Spain and the United Kingdom), while remaining on a slightly upward trend in the United States.. In Japan, it fell recently after rising for eight weeks (chart 3, black curve). This indicator is produced by the OECD using Google Trends data from searches relating to consumption, the labour market, real estate, industrial activity and uncertainty. The indicator shown here is calculated on a rolling basis over one year.

* Google Mobility Reports show how visits and length of stay at different places change compared to a baseline. The baseline is the median value, for the corresponding day of the week, during the 5-week period Jan 3–Feb 6, 2020. A figure of negative 30% indicates that traffic was down 30% compared to a baseline. The reports show trends over several weeks with the most recent data representing approximately 2-3 days ago—this is how long it takes to produce the reports. In order to smooth the series, we use a seven-day moving average of the raw data in the Google Mobility Reports. Source: Google.

DAILY CONFIRMED COVID-19 CASES (7-DAY MOVING AVERAGE)
SHARE OF PEOPLE WHO RECEIVED AT LEAST ONE DOSE OF VACCINE
RETAIL AND RECREATION MOBILITY & OECD WEEKLY TRACKER

DAILY NEW CASES & RETAIL AND RECREATION MOBILITY
LES ÉCONOMISTES AYANT PARTICIPÉ À CET ARTICLE

Découvrir les autres articles de la publication

Edito
Vacancies, job turnover and disinflation

Vacancies, job turnover and disinflation

The tight US labour market plays a crucial role in the effort of the central bank of bringing inflation back to target [...]

LIRE L'ARTICLE
Baromètre
Trade normalisation is yet to occur

Trade normalisation is yet to occur

On the whole, global trade tensions are continuing to subside, but new areas of friction are emerging as a result of the war in Ukraine [...]

LIRE L'ARTICLE
Baromètre
The new coalition government will quickly be put to the test

The new coalition government will quickly be put to the test

The results of Italy's parliamentary elections have handed power to the right-wing coalition led by Giorgia Meloni [...]

LIRE L'ARTICLE
Baromètre
A tighter but less efficient labour market than before Covid

A tighter but less efficient labour market than before Covid

Despite a tight labour market, the UK economy is showing clear signs of a slowdown in growth as inflation hits a 40-year high [...]

LIRE L'ARTICLE