 as well which is that there is that lag time and if China gets the head start does that mean it's in a better position but I think you know when it comes to economic activity you really do need more than just one actor so even if China goes around trying to finance infrastructure projects and so forth if the local government doesn't have the capacity to shoulder such a project then that also adds a limitation a very real limitation on China's ability to engage in such economic activity so even if China does have a head start I think of anything that's probably a positive thing for the rest of the world at this stage that there is at least one major economic power that's not completely straddled or completely constrained by COVID-19 and its effects but having said that it can possibly create greater relationships of asymmetry and I think one of the concerns that that people are seeing is that you know China despite COVID-19 despite mass diplomacy hasn't given up on some of its traditional priorities so it's still active assertively acting assertively sorry in the South China Sea over the Taiwan Straits and even in Hong Kong so I mean if China's I think that's that's the thing Beijing needs to decide what kind of global posturing it wants to take whether it's going to be assertive or whether it's going to be benign because that will certainly have an impact on how receptive other countries are of Chinese economic activities within their countries and and then kind of bolstering those those trading bolstering or or lessening those trading relationships with China