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The China Syndrome: the impact of the SARS epidemic in Southeast Asia

John Overby (Department of Management, Marketing & Political Science, School of Business & Public Affairs, The University of Tennessee, Martin, TN 38238)
Mike Rayburn (Department of Management, Marketing & Political Science, School of Business & Public Affairs, The University of Tennessee, Martin, TN 38238)
Kevin Hammond (Department of Management, Marketing & Political Science, School of Business & Public Affairs, The University of Tennessee, Martin, TN 38238)
David C. Wyld (Professor of Management and Director, Strategic E‐Commerce Initiative, Department of Management, Southeastern Louisiana University, SLU Box 10350, Hammond, LA 70402)

Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics

ISSN: 1355-5855

Article publication date: 1 March 2004

4424

Abstract

The war in Iraq, the threat of terrorism and the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) epidemic have made international business activities increasingly difficult and risky. The worldwide economic downturn and slow growth in domestic markets are forcing companies to depend more than ever on overseas trade. SARS emerged in China in November 2002 and has spread to 26 countries. The SARS epidemic has caused the most severe economic crisis in Southeast Asia since the wave of bank failures and currency devaluations that swept the region five years ago. The SARS epidemic has prompted health officials to implement travel advisories and restrictions, in order to defer nonessential travel to regions of Asia with large numbers of SARS cases. They are enforcing quarantine and isolation measures in major cities to try and limit the spread of SARS. The President of the United States has signed an executive order adding SARS to the list of communicable diseases that can be quarantined. A major disruption in China could paralyze just‐in‐time supply chains and cause an economic crisis for retailers and other businesses worldwide. The SARS epidemic has caused many economists to drastically reduce their economic‐growth forecasts for Asia. New infectious diseases, such as SARS, can emerge and easily travel around the globe, infecting less‐resilient hosts and mutating because of the influence of viruses and bacteria in their new environment. Health officials are even more concerned about the pandemic disaster that hasn’t happened, but may still. However, the SARS epidemic has created positive economic benefits for some companies.

Keywords

Citation

Overby, J., Rayburn, M., Hammond, K. and Wyld, D.C. (2004), "The China Syndrome: the impact of the SARS epidemic in Southeast Asia", Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics, Vol. 16 No. 1, pp. 69-94. https://doi.org/10.1108/13555850410765131

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2004, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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