The country that has avoided economic disruption the best is South Korea. They were prepared to test literally everyone right away, get a clear view of who was infected, isolate those cases immediately, and keep the rest of the people working as per usual. As for the U.S., the question becomes how long the country as a whole can remain shut down. Hotspots like New York, Seattle and parts of California may need to remain locked down as much or more than they already are. However, a number of states where the infection rate is very low may not be able to justify staying shut down more than another week or two.
In Utah, for example, we have 257 positive diagnoses from a base of 5,000 tests administered. There's been one fatality so far in Davis County. If these numbers stay relatively low over the next week or two, will the economy start up again with some basic measures for social distancing? Shutting down the economy is meant to be a temporary measure to dramatically slow the spread of the virus.
See --
https://covidtracking.com/data/#states-nav