Africa’s Ebola Epidemics Since 1976

How does 2014’s disastrous outbreak of Ebola compare with past epidemics? First discovered 38 years ago, the first epidemic occurred in South Sudan when 284 people were infected with 151 dying. The second major outbreak didn’t occur until the mid-1990s when 250 people died in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Further outbreaks happened in 2000, 2003 and 2007, killing hundreds. However, all previous epidemics pale in comparison with 2014. The death toll in West Africa is approaching 5,000 with Liberia experiencing the highest number of deaths – 2,458. Sierra Leone comes second with 1,183 while 843 people have died in Guinea. Nigeria has experienced 8 deaths but has largely contained the virus. After six weeks with no new cases, it is set to be declared Ebola free by the World Health Organization.

Infographic: Africa's Ebola Epidemics Since 1976 | Statista

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EBOLA – FEAR MONGERING OR REAL THREAT?

I’m a born skeptic. When I’m told that 3,300 people in Africa have died from the disease over the last few months, I don’t go running for my bunker. There are 7 billion people on this planet and a miniscule fraction of them died from ebola. To put that in perspective, 1 million people die from Malaria in Africa every year. For the math challenged, that is 2,740 people PER DAY. So why is the world in such an uproar about ebola? The American healthcare workers who contracted it, were cured within a couple weeks after getting treatment in the U.S.

Is ebola a nasty disease? Yes.

Is it going to become an epidemic in the U.S.? No.

Will it be used by doomer websites to drive visitor counts? Yes.

Will it be used by media outlets to increase ratings? Yes.

Will it be used by “scientists” and drug companies to increase their funding and profits? Yes.

Will it be used by the government to further restrict my liberties and freedoms? Hell Yes.

Will it be used to instill fear in the sheep and keep them distracted from how badly they are getting fucked by those in control? Absolutely.

Will I be losing any sleep over the ebola fear mongering? Not one minute.

Now for my wise and sage advice. DON’T GO TO AFRICA. DON’T HAVE SEX WITH AN AFRICAN. DON’T LET AN AFRICAN SNEEZE IN YOUR FACE.

The slimy Wall Street shysters are already profiting from the fear mongering by convincing muppets to buy obscure drug companies and hazmat suit makers. If there were justice in this world, dozens of infected ebola victims would be unleashed into the executive offices of every Wall Street banking entity and told to spit in the faces of Jamie Dimon and the rest of the criminal cabal. A man can dream, can’t he?

Now back to your regularly scheduled financial doom.

 

Sen. Rand Paul sounds Ebola alarm

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, warned that the U.S. could be underestimating the potential for Ebola to wreak havoc in the U.S. because of “political correctness.”

“It’s a big mistake to underestimate the potential for problems worldwide,” Paul said on “The Laura Ingraham Show” Tuesday.

Citing reassurances by the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Tom Frieden, that there was little risk of a traveler bringing Ebola to the United States and causing an outbreak, Paul countered, “I really think that it is being dominated by political correctness and I think because of political correctness we’re not really making sound, rational, scientific decisions on this.”

The CDC announced Tuesday that the first U.S. case of Ebola had been confirmed in a Liberian man who had traveled to Dallas to visit family.

“We should not underestimate the transmissibility of this,” Paul, an opthamologist by trade, said, noting that even doctors and nurses wearing gloves, gowns and masks are contracting the disease. “My suspicion is that it’s a lot more transmissible than that if people who are taking every precaution are getting it. There are people getting it who simply helped people get in or out of a taxicab.”

The World Health Organization says that health-care workers have frequently become infected while treating patients with the virus because of “close contact with patients when infection control precautions are not strictly practiced.”

Paul, who is thinking about running for president, also questioned President Obama’s decision to dispatch 3,000 military personnel to West Africa to help combat the spread of the disease.

“Where is disease most transmissible? When you are confined on a ship,” Paul said.

He also assailed doctors like Ezekiel Emanuel – the brother of former White House Chief of Staff and current Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel – who said on MSNBC Tuesday that people who suggest there will be an outbreak in the U.S. are “fear mongering.”

Paul pointed to past outbreaks, including the Spanish flu in 1918 and the Bubonic plague in the 14th century that killed millions to demonstrate that disease pandemics can spread rapidly.

Earlier in the show, he sarcastically said to Ingraham, “I can’t believe that you don’t think it’s enough of a plan to prevent worldwide pandemic to cough into your elbow. If you just bring your elbow up to your mouth and cough into it, surely that will stop a worldwide pandemic,” a reference to the president’s instructions to the American public in 2009 to sneeze into their sleeves, rather than their hands, to help stop the spread of the H1N1 flu virus.

Not all politicians share Paul’s view that the U.S. is taking insufficient precautions. On the other end of the spectrum Wednesday was Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who held a news conference to calm residents of his state, ground zero for the first U.S. Ebola case.

“There are few places in the world better equipped to meet the challenge that is posed in this case,” said Perry, who is also considering a presidential bid. “Texas is one of only 13 states certified by the CDC to conduct diagnostic Ebola testing. And we have the health care professionals and the institutions that are second to none. The public should have every confidence that the highly trained professionals involved here will succeed in this very important mission,” Perry said.

“This case is serious. Rest assured that our system is working as it should,” he continued. “Professionals on every level of the chain of command know what to do to minimize this potential risk to the people of Texas and of this country, for that matter.”

The Rise of Africa… and How To Play It

The Rise of Africa… and How To Play It

By Adam J. Crawford, Analyst

Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).

Say the words and most people think of poverty… famine… epidemics… political strife… sectarian violence. Yet, just recently, Microsoft announced a new investment on the continent, calling Africa a “game changer in the global economy.” So what gives?

Game Changer?

For starters, we concede SSA faces challenges… relatively low per-capita GDP, relatively low life expectancy, and more than its fair share of military conflict. Nevertheless, considerable progress is being made.

Politically, things have changed dramatically over the last two decades. In a recent report from financial advisory service firm KPMG titled “African Emergence—The Rise of the Phoenix,” researchers explained why…

The end of the Cold War more than two decades ago brought new freedom to Africa. People started to demand political representation and called on governments to be more transparent. Democratic features were introduced and a vibrant civil society emerged.

Influenced by this political renaissance, governments began to act more responsibly. Several ended hostilities with neighboring countries.

With political change came economic change.

Beginning in the 1990s, fledgling African democracies increasingly accommodated private enterprise by reducing trade barriers, cutting corporate taxes, and privatizing state-run industries. By the time the 2000s rolled around, these reforms started to gain traction. In 2000, GDP for all of SSA was a meager $331 billion. By 2012, it had quadrupled to $1.3 trillion.

As far as the future is concerned, with more stable political and economic environments and the unleashing of market forces, SSA will reap the benefits of two megatrends:

1) growing demand for natural resources;

2) increasing consumer spending by an expanding middle class.

Let me explain…

As the world’s population grows and per-capita consumption rises in emerging economies, the demand for natural resources will increase… and SSA has plenty of natural resources, such as gold, oil, chromium, and platinum. But as important as natural resource exports will be, they aren’t the region’s only engine for economic growth.

Consumerism is also a powerful factor, and it’s being driven by an emerging middle class. More and more SSA citizens are moving from subsistence farming to higher-paying urban jobs. In 2000, about 59 million African households were earning discretionary income; by 2020, discretionary income will be available to 128 million households.

All of this points to the expectation of continued economic growth. Economists at the International Monetary Fund estimate that by 2018, GDP for SSA will reach $1.9 trillion. That amounts to a compounded annual growth rate of 7%, which compares favorably with estimates for Latin America and developing Asia of 4.7% and 8.1% respectively.

Leapfrogging to the Tech Frontier

Microsoft is not the only big tech company betting on growth opportunities in SSA. Intel, Google, Hewlett-Packard, and IBM have also invested heavily in the region. But are these companies a little early? Won’t the benefits to tech come after the buildup of roads, power grids, and healthcare systems?

Not really.

Whereas in developed countries, high tech has been “bolted onto” existing infrastructures years after they have been created, in developing regions high tech can be integrated in as the infrastructure is constructed. For example, as the US struggles to mesh electronic health records with the healthcare system and smart-grid technology with the power grid, developing economies can build these features right into their nascent systems at the outset. In the words of John Kelly, head of research at IBM, Africa “can leapfrog straight to the tech frontier, without worrying about adapting old systems…”

In addition, the Cloud is adaptable to and quite useful in the early stages of an economy’s development. According to The Economist, “The ability to use software, computing power, and storage online ‘as a service,’ paying only for what you need and only when you need it, may put the cost of information technology within the budget of many small African businesses.”

The point is: the time for tech in SSA is now… not a decade from now. That’s why so many big tech firms are setting up shop in the region. Research firm IDC predicts that IT spending across Africa will increase from $30 billion in 2012 to $40 billion in 2016, and if telecom is included, spending will increase from $103 billion in 2012 to $130 billion by 2016.

But here’s the thing: Africa won’t significantly move the revenue needle for the global tech giants, so investors should look elsewhere for opportunities. Our advice? An African telecom.

The Gains Down in Africa

As mentioned before, over the next few years, millions of SSA households will be acquiring discretionary income for the first time. That means millions more in the region will have more money to purchase necessities, and they’ll begin to purchase things like mobile phones and mobile services.

According to GSMA, a global trade organization for mobile phone operators, there will be 250 million mobile phone connections in Africa over the next five years. That bodes well for African telecoms. But it’s a hotly contested space. So which telecom is the best bet?

We like MTN Group Limited (MTNOY). The company is on solid financial ground. It pays a nice dividend. Its network is superior to the competition’s, which is why MTNOY is the market share leader in SSA. Oh, and the stock is cheap—even after the 12% run the stock has gone on since we recommended it in the December issue of BIG TECH. If you want access to our comprehensive report on MTNOY as well as access to our other buy recommendations, which include a networking equipment provider with 90% near-term upside potential, then sign up for a risk-free trial of BIG TECH.

The article The Rise of Africa… and How To Play It was originally published at caseyresearch.com.

WE’RE SURELY OUTSMARTING THE CHINESE

As the Federal Reserve, along with their Wall Street banker owners, in cooperation with Obama and his Treasury Dept., have been artificially suppressing the price of gold since 2011, someone has been taking advantage of the bargain prices. Do you think the brilliant Ivy League minds that caused two financial market crashes in the last 13 years have outsmarted those rubes in China? The fact that China ceased buying US Treasury bonds two years ago hasn’t worried the brain surgeons in the Eccles Building. They’ve got everything under control.

China wouldn’t be signing energy deals with Russia, buying up natural resources in Africa, making oil deals with Iran and buying up all the gold they can get their hands on because they are preparing for a dramatic change in the world currency regime. That’s silly. Those foolish Chinese don’t realize that gold is barbaric relic and that the fiat paper USD will always retain its value. Just because Janet prints $2.8 billion more of them per day doesn’t mean a thing. Faith in bankers will make everyone wealthy.

Those wily orientals don’t know what they are doing.