The Democratic Republic of Congo is burying its dead in silence. Not out of respect, but out of fear. As the Ebola virus tightens its grip on the eastern provinces, the government has imposed a ban on traditional burial rites, forcing grieving families to inter their loved ones in secret. This is not a public health measure. It is a capital flight of dignity.
Let us be clear: the market for grief is now operating below the radar. Children as young as ten are digging graves at night, their tears mixed with the red dust of the Congo Basin. They do so because the state has deemed their mourning a threat to the economy of containment. Every funeral is a potential index case. Every ritual a liability to the balance sheet of epidemic control.
The numbers are stark. Since the outbreak began in August 2018, over 2,000 lives have been lost. But the true cost cannot be measured in body counts alone. We must consider the yield of despair. The government, with support from international agencies, has banned washing of bodies, a cornerstone of local custom. They have outlawed large gatherings. They have made the dead a commodity to be disposed of efficiently, like a bad debt.
But markets abhor a vacuum. When the state fails to provide a safe channel for mourning, the black market steps in. Families, desperate to honour their ancestors, are paying undertakers to flout the rules. They hold secret ceremonies in the dead of night, knowing full well the risk of infection. This is not irrational behaviour. This is a rational response to a mispriced risk.
The central bank of public health has failed to calibrate its intervention correctly. By suppressing normal funeral practices without offering a credible alternative, they have created a parallel economy of sorrow. The spillover effects are predictable. Cases spike. Trust erodes. The very people they aim to protect now see the response as a hostile takeover of their culture.
Consider the orphan. He or she loses not only parents but the ability to say goodbye properly. The trauma is compounded. In the long term, this will prove costly. We are sowing the seeds of future social instability, a form of intergenerational debt that cannot be restructured.
What is the solution? It is not to lift all restrictions. That would be fiscal folly. Instead, we need a targeted intervention. Allow supervised burial rituals, with protective equipment and trained personnel. Create safe spaces for collective grieving. Invest in community engagement as a hedge against non-compliance. The cost is modest. The return on investment is measured in lives saved and trust restored.
The Bank of England has a saying: "Never fight the market." The same applies here. You cannot fight the human need to mourn. You can only accommodate it within a framework of risk management. The Congo is learning this lesson the hard way, with every secret grave dug in the moonlight.
In the meantime, the orphans bury their parents in silence. They are not just losing their families. They are losing their heritage. And that is a loss no quantitative easing can fix.









