Gold opens Bt50 cheaper on Monday #SootinClaimon.Com

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Gold opens Bt50 cheaper on Monday (nationthailand.com)

Gold opens Bt50 cheaper on Monday

EconDec 14. 2020

By The Nation

The price of gold dropped by Bt50 per baht weight in the morning trade on Monday after rising Bt100 per baht weight at closing on Saturday, the Gold Traders Association reported.

As of 9.28am, the buying price of a gold bar was Bt26,100 per baht weight and selling price Bt26,200, while gold ornaments cost Bt25,635.56 and Bt26,700, respectively.

On Saturday’s close, the buying price of a gold bar was Bt26,150 per baht weight and selling price Bt26,250, while gold ornaments cost Bt25,681.04 and Bt26,750, respectively. The price dropped slightly by Bt50 per baht weight last week.

The spot gold price moved to US$1,836 (Bt55,233) per ounce in the morning, while the Comex (Commodity Exchange) gold price to be delivered in February next year rose by $6.2 to $1,843.6 per ounce on Friday. All thanks to mass buy-ups of the precious metal amid uncertainty over the US rollout of economic stimulus package, no-deal Brexit and signs of dollar inflation.

In Hong Kong, gold rose by HK$30 to HK$16,970 (Bt65,862) per tael, the Chinese Gold and Silver Exchange Society reported.

Co-payment scheme to recruit new graduates falls badly short of target #SootinClaimon.Com

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Co-payment scheme to recruit new graduates falls badly short of target (nationthailand.com)

Co-payment scheme to recruit new graduates falls badly short of target

EconDec 14. 2020Labour Minister Suchart ChomklinLabour Minister Suchart Chomklin 

By The Nation

The government co-payment scheme covering the salaries of new graduates is falling short of its target to generate 260,000 new jobs, said Labour Minister Suchart Chomklin.

The Cabinet has approved a budget of Bt20 billion to spur recruitment of new graduates by paying 50 per cent of their salaries for the first year.

However, only 20,000 new jobs were created under the scheme as of October, said Suchart.

The minister said he would evaluate the effectiveness of the scheme until April, when a fresh batch of new graduates will be seeking jobs. Depending on that evaluation, the scheme’s remaining budget might be transferred to help recruitment in the tourism industry, he added. The tourism sector is currently facing severe impacts from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Suchart suggested the poor response to the scheme was due to major companies preferring to recruit people on long-term contracts during the economic recovery, rather than the year offered under the scheme.

And though the scheme seemed to fit the needs of small and medium-sized enterprises, SMEs were not hiring workers at this time of economic downturn, he added.

Four major banks delay sale of non-performing loans #SootinClaimon.Com

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Four major banks delay sale of non-performing loans (nationthailand.com)

Four major banks delay sale of non-performing loans

EconDec 14. 2020

By The Nation

Four major Thai banks say they will focus on managing their asset quality instead of dumping non-performing loans under unfavourable market conditions.

Payong Srivanich, president of Krungthai Bank, said KTB’s priority was to maintain asset quality and look after debtors. He expects the bank’s non-performing loans to remain flat at the 4.21 per cent of total loans registered in the third quarter.

He said KTB regularly sells its non-performing asset (NPAs) as part of debt management measures, but the large volume now being sold made the market unfavourable.

“If we can’t get good prices for our NPAs, we will not sell them,” he said.

The bank is also cutting its exposure to concentrated risks. For example, it is reducing the proportion of total industrial loans to the rice sector from 60 per cent, and has cut lending to cooperatives from Bt70 billion to Bt30 billion, all of which must be backed by collateral.

Kasikornbank CEO Kattiya Indaravijaya said it, too, was choosing to manage bad debts rather than sell them on. The bank is supporting customers by restructuring their loan conditions to manage bad debt. 

“We are confident that we can manage bad debts better than in the past when we usually chose to sell them on,” said Kattiya.

Deja Tulananda, chairman of Bangkok Bank’s board of executive directors, said its priority was to preserve asset quality rather than sell bad debt. By doing so, the bank could cover loans and also benefit borrowers, he assured.

“We remain focused on debt management and, under the central bank’s supporting policy, we are confident that we can take better care of our debtors and prevent bad debt from rising,” he said.

Piti Tantakasem, CEO at TMB Bank, said the bank will maintain its push for provisions against risk assets begun in the third quarter. Currently, NPLs were not high, accounting for just 2.3-2.4 per cent of total loans and should not exceed 3 per cent by the end of this year, he said.

The bank will delay selling NPAs this year in order to avoid flooding the market, he added.

Covid-19 second wave to hit year-end spending by Bt16 billion, economist warns #SootinClaimon.Com

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Covid-19 second wave to hit year-end spending by Bt16 billion, economist warns (nationthailand.com)

Covid-19 second wave to hit year-end spending by Bt16 billion, economist warns

EconDec 13. 2020 A tourist looks out at the  Khanom-Sichon Sea in Nakhon Si Thammarat province on December 10. A tourist looks out at the Khanom-Sichon Sea in Nakhon Si Thammarat province on December 10. 

By The Nation

The second wave of the Covid-19 outbreak will cost local tourism around Bt16 billion during the New Year holidays, says an economist.

Anusorn Tamajai, former dean at Rangsit University’s Faculty of Economics, estimated that the second wave of Covid-19 infections would cost the local tourism industry Bt14.1 to  Bt16.9 billion in lost revenue during the New Year festival.

His analysis comes amid rising cases of local infections after some infected patients entered Thailand illegally from Myanmar. While the United States has the most number of cases with over 16.5 million, followed by India — almost 10 million — Thailand ranks 151st among countries with over 4,000 cases.

He was optimistic that the number of new cases in Thailand would be contained as the government had put in place an effective tracing system. 

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha earlier insisted that Thailand had not yet experienced a second wave. 

Anusorn, however, said that concerns over the rising number of new cases was expected to discourage many people from travelling and spending during the year-end holiday season.

Revenue from Thai travellers during the last New Year was Bt28 billion. Many research houses have estimated that Thai consumers will cut their spending significantly while those who live in Bangkok are expected to spend about Bt30 billion, but it is below the average spending of the past two decades, he said.

Anusorn, however, added that if Thailand could not contain the second wave the Thai economy next year may grow less than 4 per cent, while the rising number of new cases in Thailand’s trading partner countries would adversely affect Thai exports up to the first quarter of next year.

The National Economic and Social Development Council has forecast that the Thai economy will expand 4 to 5 per cent next year.

Regarding financial markets, Anusorn predicted that gold price would test a barrier at US$2,000 per ounce, as investors are worried about risk assets stemming from the delay in the US stimulus package and the possibility of a no-deal Brexit.

In the short run, gold price next week may move up to $1,845 to 1,850 per ounce, he said, while gold bar in Thailand may rise to Bt26,150 to 26,600 per baht weight.

The Thai baht is expected to appreciate further after it rose almost 4 per cent last month. The baht could rise to Bt29.50 per dollar by the end of this year, strengthening from the Bt30 level, he predicted. Foreign investors had net buys of Thai stocks worth Bt50 billion over one month and bonds worth Bt20 billion. They could sell Thai financial assets to make a profit before Christmas, he warned.

Meanwhile, the rising  unemployed benefit claims in the US had put high pressure on the dollar, he said.

The US economy has shown signs of decelerating at the end of this year. The return of the global economy to normal next year would depend on the effectiveness of the Covid-19 vaccines, he said.

He did not expect the US Federal Reserve and Bank of Japan to further loosen monetary policies during their meeting next week.

What the story of Kaavan tells us #SootinClaimon.Com

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What the story of Kaavan tells us (nationthailand.com)

What the story of Kaavan tells us

ColumnsDec 13. 2020Kaavan has spent nearly a decade alone. (Photo: Reuters)Kaavan has spent nearly a decade alone. (Photo: Reuters) 

By Amitava Kar
The Daily Star

Amid the sad, the sordid and the sensational, let us look at some other news. On November 30, Kaavan, dubbed the “loneliest elephant” arrived from Islamabad to Cambodia to start a new life. It was the culmination of years of campaigning for his transfer by the animal rights group Free the Wild.

Kaavan was gifted to Pakistan by the government of Sri Lanka in 1985 when he was 1. For more than 30 years, he was kept in shackles in poor conditions in an Islamabad zoo. After the death of his companion Saheli in 2012, he developed multiple physical and psychological issues. 

In a landmark verdict earlier this year, Athar Minallah, the Chief Justice of Islamabad High Court observed that Kaavan had been treated harshly which caused him unimaginable pain and suffering. His anguish must come to an end by relocating him to a proper elephant sanctuary, in or outside Pakistan, the verdict held. Like humans, animals have natural rights which must be recognised, the judgment added, and that it is a right of each animal, a living being, to live in an environment that has been contemplated by nature.

Iconic American singer Cher, the founder of Free the Wild, arrived a day earlier to see Kaavan off and thank the government. Animal welfare group Four Paws International had been deployed to move him. When the crew tried to coax the five and a half ton animal into the giant airplane, he got agitated, as he was unaccustomed to close human contact. Amir Khalil, the group’s celebrated Egyptian veterinarian, started singing Frank Sinatra’s classic melody “My Way”, which apparently calmed the elephant. Before taking off, Cher serenaded Kaavan with “A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes.” 

Why would people go to such great lengths to rescue an animal during a pandemic? So what if he had been suffering? So are humans. 

There is, indeed, much to celebrate in this story. It is a story of human tenderness out of the blue which is no less powerful than the stories of death, destruction, and savagery. Have we grown so inured to think the worst of experience constitutes our lives, that evidence of the best of experience is an outlier and thus unworthy of our attention? 

It would be naïve to regard the dark caves of the world as an aberration. We know better than that. We have seen too much. Yet, we can recognise the thrilling beauty in this world too, when we see it, and cherish it, and spend time with it. It is not to say that everyone could act the same way. But everyone feels the possibility in themselves. That is the abiding wonder of this story. The news is just what is happening. We, too, can be happening. These are our lives. Should we not attempt to control them? Must we not assert and discover these moments of human sublimity by which we know life, too?

Amitava Kar is a mechanical engineer.

Authoritarians like Trump need elections to hold power. They just don’t need votes. #SootinClaimon.Com

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Authoritarians like Trump need elections to hold power. They just don’t need votes. (nationthailand.com)

Authoritarians like Trump need elections to hold power. They just don’t need votes.

ColumnsDec 13. 2020Timothy Snyder, the Levin Professor of History at Yale University.Timothy Snyder, the Levin Professor of History at Yale University. 

By Special to The Washington Post · Timothy Snyder · OPINION, OP-ED 

Twenty-first century authoritarians are against counting votes, but they legitimate themselves through elections. They don’t seem to have any better ideas. Lacking the kind of powerful ideology that fascists and communists once had, they prove their power by faking the vote count and making everyone else go along. President Donald Trump has adopted this approach, and much of the national Republican Party is helping him.

Democracy has trouble with a certain kind of big lie, which is that the best way to give power to the people is to do away with the procedures that make that possible. Contemporary authoritarians have “pretend” voting, which they can never lose. Vladimir Lenin spoke of democratic centralism, the claim that a few men understood history and could direct it for the good of all. Josef Stalin installed governments called “people’s democracies,” the idea being that justice was served when the right people, but not all people, were served by single-party rule. Fascists pushed this thinking to the level of myth, claiming that a leader – “Führer” – mystically embodies the will of the people. These are ideas that have stirred the hearts of millions, people not so different from us, and not necessarily less wise.

It is easy to be tempted by the idea that representing the people means something grander than counting their votes. Americans are not immune to such temptation. Much of our history involves keeping most of our people away from the ballot box. That is the great challenge of democracy, one that is so often not met – to include others rather than claim that only people like ourselves are actually the people.

Trump, like Vladimir Putin and other contemporary authoritarians, most likely has simple reasons for wanting to stay in power. It’s better to die in a comfortable bed than in prison or in exile. But to do so he needed people to claim that democracy would be saved only when votes were ignored, and a number of Republicans obliged.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton yielded to that old temptation Dec. 7, when he asked the Supreme Court to install Trump as president for a second term, under the rather feeble guise of a claim that Texas voters had been harmed by other states’ practices. Like authoritarians around the world, Paxton maintained the pretense that he was defending the nation, though his actions aimed to disenfranchise millions of people. Paxton is known for many things, such as being subject to a federal investigation. He is not, however, known for protecting voters. Texas makes it hard to vote, and in some cases it uses digital voting procedures that are impossible to verify. This is not irony. This is not hypocrisy. It is the big lie: that we would somehow be a better democracy if “the people” just meant the right people, and not all people.

The big lie about the present, that Trump won the election, is known to be such by those who propagate it. The big lie challenges our dignity as citizens by portraying our actual votes as fraudulent. Rather than moving the country along, as voting should, the big lie forces us into a story of us and them, those who believe the story and those who do not, with no motion at all. Time stops at the founding moment of fake victimhood, which has to grow into a conspiracy theory that then takes up the space we need for politics and policy.

The big lie turns the aggressors into the victims. It takes away the past from which we might learn. Rather than accept that too many of us have made it too hard for too long for African Americans to vote, we are asked to believe that Black people unfairly dominate our political system by cheating. That is what Paxton’s lawsuit came down to (Paragraph 98: the invention of the “phenomenon of Wayne County election workers running the same ballots through a tabulator multiple times,” a fantasy that someone in Detroit counted the same ballot over and over).

The Supreme Court refused to hear this, but perhaps the real audience was elsewhere. Perhaps Paxton was just campaigning for a pardon from the president. Perhaps the Republican congressmen who filed an amicus brief supporting the suit are just wary of the president’s influence. Perhaps they have not thought about what would happen if they won, what an America without elections would look like – how terribly we would treat one another, how low we would fall before our enemies, how foolish we would look to our children.

Or perhaps they have, and are tempted anyway. Motives don’t matter to scoundrels, who will revise them later anyway. Democracy has trouble with those who traduce it in its own name, whatever their motives might be. Often, as in Germany in 1933, this is how the end looks: an imperfect constitution, a global shock, then an assemblage of cynics, sleepwalkers and vicious fools, working within the system, shouting that there is an emergency, perhaps not all of them entirely sure what they are doing but ready to accept whatever comes next, and treat it as normal.

One attempt will fail, but it creates a myth of victimhood, what the Nazis called a “stab in the back.” This divides the population and discredits the system. And then, a bit later, another attempt succeeds.

Democracy means that our mistakes are temporary rather than permanent. Let’s not make the permanent mistake of giving it up.

– – –

Snyder is the Levin Professor of History at Yale University and the author of “On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from The Twentieth Century.”

Arnon unfazed by lese majeste charges, says rallies will get more serious in 2021 #SootinClaimon.Com

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Arnon unfazed by lese majeste charges, says rallies will get more serious in 2021 (nationthailand.com)

Arnon unfazed by lese majeste charges, says rallies will get more serious in 2021

PoliticsDec 14. 2020

By THE NATION

Human-rights lawyer Arnon Nampa, who is also one of the core protest leaders, told the press on Monday morning that pro-democracy rallies next year will focus on far more serious issues.

Arnon was at the Bang Pho Police Station in Bangkok with his lawyer to hear charges of violating the lese majeste law during a rally at Kiak Kai intersection on November 17.

He told the press that he has been charged with violating the draconian law four times now, and expects more charges to be slapped on him soon, adding that he was ready to fight.

As for rallies, he said the protest leaders are currently relaxing and preparing to address far more serious issues next year.

Arnon is also scheduled to visit the Technology Crime Suppression Division to face another charge for allegedly violating the lese majeste law while participating in a demonstration at Democracy Monument on November 8.

Leader of Thai Liberal Party announces support for amendment to lese majeste law #SootinClaimon.Com

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Leader of Thai Liberal Party announces support for amendment to lese majeste law (nationthailand.com)

Leader of Thai Liberal Party announces support for amendment to lese majeste law

PoliticsDec 14. 2020Sereepisuth TemeeyavesSereepisuth Temeeyaves 

By THE NATION

Sereepisuth Temeeyaves, leader of the Thai Liberal Party, announced on Monday that he fully supported calls for amendments to the lese majeste law, adding that the issues of “defamation” and “insult” should be removed from this law.According to the Criminal Code’s Article 112, anybody who “defames, insults or threatens the King, the Queen, the Heir-apparent or the Regent, shall be punished with imprisonment of three to 15 years”.Sereepisuth said there is no need for a separate law that covers defamation of the monarchy, when there is already Article 326, which says “whoever, imputes anything to the other person before a third person in a manner likely to impair the reputation of such other person or to expose such other person to hate or scorn, is said to commit defamation, and shall be punished with imprisonment not exceeding one year or fined not exceeding Bt20,000 or both”.However, he said, the matter of “threat” to the monarchy can remain in Article 112.

Boris Johnson dials up warnings of a no-deal Brexit as Britain and E.U. agree to continue talks #SootinClaimon.Com

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Boris Johnson dials up warnings of a no-deal Brexit as Britain and E.U. agree to continue talks (nationthailand.com)

Boris Johnson dials up warnings of a no-deal Brexit as Britain and E.U. agree to continue talks

InternationalDec 14. 2020Boris JohnsonBoris Johnson 

By The Washington Post · William Booth, Quentin Ariès

LONDON – At the 11th hour, Britain and the European Union said on Sunday afternoon they have made enough progress in their seemingly endless trade and security talks to continue negotiations into the coming days.

Many had feared Sunday was the final hour to reach a Brexit deal. But the talks will roll on. Businesses on both sides of the English Channel, fearing chaos at the ports and steep, immediate tariffs, sighed a collective, “whew, that was close!”

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, in a TV address, did not sound optimstic, however. “I’m afraid we’re still very far apart on some key things,” he said. “But where there is life there’s hope, we’re going to keep talking to see what we can do, the U.K. certainly won’t be walking away from the talks.”

Johnson warned “the most likely” outcome would see Britain leave the European Union with no deal, forcing it to trade on what the prime minister insists on calling “Australian terms,” which really means going forward with no free trade deal at all, but instead defaulting to do business by the rules set by the World Trade Organization.

Britain’s largest trading partner is Europe and so reverting to WTO rules means taxes, or tariffs, on exports sold to the continent. While overall, the average WTO tariff is less than 3 percent, for automobiles it is 10 percent and for fresh meat – such as Welsh lamb – it is 38 percent or higher.

In his remarks, the British prime minister might have been jostling for position. Or he might have been warning the nation.

“The best thing to do now, for everybody, is to follow up all the work that has been done over the last four and half years, colossal amount of preparation at our ports, everywhere across the U.K., get ready to trade on WTO terms,” said Johnson. “There is a clarity and a simplicity in that approach that has it’s own advantages. It is not where we wanted to get to but if we have to end up with that solution, the U.K. is more than prepared.”

Whether Britain is truly prepared to have its import and exports subjected to border controls, inspections and tarrifs is unknown. Many predict chaos at the ports.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen was slightly less gloomy. She said it is worth trying to struggle on to a finish line.”We had a useful phone call this morning. We discussed the major unresolved topics,” the commisson president said.

Then she patted both sides on the back, noting, “our negotiating teams have been working day and night over recent days. And despite the exhaustion after almost a year of negotiations, despite the fact that deadlines have been missed over and over, we think it is responsible at this point to go the extra mile.”

And so, “we have accordingly mandated our negotiators to continue the talks and to see whether an agreement can even at this late stage be reached.”

The negotiations will continue, at least for now, in Brussels. Britain exits the European Union at midnight on Dec. 31.

The Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney, who has been a close observer of the talks, told the national broadcaster RTE on Sunday that “a deal can be done, but it really needs to be done within the next few days.”

Jitters of a no-deal “hard Brexit” have been dialed up, regardless.

The Guardian newspaper reported the British government “warned supermarkets to stockpile food and other essential supplies amid increasing fears of a no-deal Brexit in less than three weeks’ time.”

On the Sunday morning TV talk shows, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab sought to assure Britons that there would be enough medicines and vaccines in the country no matter what, because the government has already begun to stockpile supplies.

Meanwhile, Johnson’s government announced that four Royal Navy patrol ships would be ready to take to British waters to protect the country’s fishing grounds in the event of a no-deal Brexit. The vessels would be given the power to board and impound European fishing boats inside Britain’s 200-mile exclusive economic zone.

European Council President Charles Michel, on the French radio on Sunday, said the sides should keep calm and carry on. “The U.K. and Europe are friends, partners, allies and it will be the case after Brexit. I encourage everyone to remain calm. I would not say, like Donald Trump, that our boats are bigger than theirs, because I’m trying to be serious, but, on the European side at least we remain calm …We are reasonable. We want to have close links with the U.K.”

The impasse and issues have not changed over these many months. Britain wants to be able to “take back control” of its sovereignty – for many Brexiteers, that was the whole point of leaving the bloc. Johnson and his allies say it makes no sense to leave the customs union and single market, only to have to continue to align in lock-step with E.U. regulations over state subsidies, labor laws and enviromental regulations.

But Europe has appeared in little mood for compromise – especially over these “level playing field” challenges.

The disagreements have touched on areas that have been sore points for years – in some cases, centuries, like fisheries, specifically European access to British waters.

In addition to wrangling over cod and scallops, which represents far less than 1 percent of GDP to either Britain or Europe, the E.U. also doesn’t want Britain undercutting it on issues such as state aid or environmental regulations to gain a competitive advantage. It wants to make sure British rules stay closely aligned with E.U. ones as a prerequisite for Britain to get relatively unfettered access to the European market.

Members of White House staff to get early access to coronavirus vaccine #SootinClaimon.Com

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Members of White House staff to get early access to coronavirus vaccine (nationthailand.com)

Members of White House staff to get early access to coronavirus vaccine

InternationalDec 14. 2020

By The Washington Post · Felicia Sonmez, Josh Dawsey

WASHINGTON – Some White House staff members will be among the first wave of people in the United States to receive coronavirus vaccinations, a Trump administration official said Sunday night.

The news comes as boxes of the first shipments of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine departed a facility in Michigan, with front-line health-care workers, the elderly and other vulnerable people expected to receive top priority.

“Senior officials across all three branches of government will receive vaccinations pursuant to continuity of government protocols established in executive policy,” National Security Council spokesman John Ullyot said in a statement.

President Donald Trump and several of his top aides have played down the severity of the virus that has killed nearly 300,000 Americans, with at least 16 million cases reported since late February. The virus has been surging throughout the United States.

The Trump administration plans come as the White House has forged ahead with a packed season of at least 25 indoor holiday parties, ignoring warnings from the its own public health professionals to limit travel and avoid congregating in large group settings. At a number of the parties, some guests were maskless.

News of the White House vaccinations was first reported by The New York Times.

According to an administration official who was not authorized to speak publicly about the move, the White House considers a coronavirus vaccine “a necessary resource for those continuity personnel across the executive branch to meet their continuity-focused roles and responsibilities.”

Citing a 2016 policy directive called the National Continuity Policy, the official said vaccinations are warranted for “the appropriate leadership and staff across all branches,” without providing further specifics.

The White House declined to say whether Trump, who contracted covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, earlier this year, would receive the vaccine. Vice President Mike Pence is expected to receive it soon.

If Trump and others take the vaccine publicly, that could encourage many of his supporters to take it. Former presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama have volunteered to receive it in public. The White House has a steep uphill campaign to build trust in it after repeatedly politicizing the virus, as recently as Friday. The Office of Management and Budget has asked officials in at least four agencies to determine who needs the vaccine.

Moncef Slaoui, chief science adviser to the White House’s effort to develop a vaccine, said in an interview on “Fox News Sunday” that officials hope to get about 70% to 80% of the U.S. population vaccinated between May and June.

In the meantime, he said, those receiving priority will be “the long-term-care-facility people, the elderly people with comorbidities, the first-line workers, the health-care workers.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, indoor gatherings pose more risks than those outdoors, and “gatherings with more people pose more risk than gatherings with fewer people.”

Even so, members of the president’s inner circle – including Trump himself – have at times declined to wear masks, and the White House has held parties this month that include more than 50 guests. Those events could risk the health of White House staff members and others who work at the parties.

News of the vaccinations probably will further the perception that those in proximity to Trump have received access to treatment that is unavailable to ordinary Americans amid the pandemic.

Rudy Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer, was recently released from the hospital after being treated for covid-19. In a radio interview after his discharge, Giuliani said he received remdesivir, dexamethasone and “exactly the same” treatment that Trump received when he was hospitalized in October.

He also said he was unaware that most Americans are not able to receive those medications because of scarcity issues.

“I didn’t know that. . . . I’m not sure about that,” Giuliani said.