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The World after COVID-19 and its impact on Global
Economy
Suggested Citation: Mishra, Mukesh Kumar (2020) : The World after COVID-19 and its impact
on Global Economy, ZBW – Leibniz Information Centre for Economics, Kiel, Hamburg
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www.econstor.eu
The World after COVID-19 and its impact on Global Economy
Abstract
Urgent and bold policy measures are needed, not only to contain the pandemic and save lives,
but also to protect the most vulnerable in our societies from economic ruin and to sustain
economic growth and financial stability. We are facing a global health crisis unlike any in the
100-year history, one that is killing people, spreading human suffering, and upending people‘s
lives. But this is much more than a health crisis. It is a human, economic and social crisis. The
coronavirus disease (COVID-19), which has been characterized as a pandemic by the World
Health Organization (WHO), is attacking societies at their core. The global economy could
shrink by up to 1 per cent in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic, a reversal from the previous
forecast of 2.5 per cent growth, the UN has said, warning that it may contract even further if
restrictions on the economic activities are extended without adequate fiscal responses. The
COVOD-19 pandemic will cause a dramatic drop in FDI flows. MNEs, local business and
investment have been severely affected with far reaching social and economic repercussions. The
coronavirus crisis is first and foremost a public health threat, but it is also, and increasingly, an
economic threat. The so-called ―Covid-19‖ shock will trigger a recession in some countries and a
deceleration of global annual growth to below 2.5 per cent -- often taken as the recessionary
threshold for the world economy1. The world is being flooded with perhaps unfamiliar words and
phrases in coverage of COVID-19, the newly discovered coronavirus — starting with the very
word "coronavirus." The new coronavirus, which first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan last
December, has infected more than 210,000 people in at least 171 countries and territories
globally, according to the World Health Organization. The on-going spread of the new
coronavirus has become one of the biggest threats to the global economy and financial markets.
JEL Code:F62,F69
1
UNCTAD Report
Introduction
As the COVID-19 virus spreads globally, economic paralysis and unemployment follow in its
wake. But the economic fallout of the pandemic in most emerging and developing economies is
likely to be far worse than anything we have seen in China, Europe, or the United States. This is
no time to expect them to meet their debt payments, either to private or official creditors. With
inadequate health-care systems, limited capacity to deliver fiscal or monetary stimulus, and
underdeveloped social-safety nets, the emerging and developing world is on the cusp not only of
a humanitarian crisis, but also of the most serious financial crisis since at least the 1930s. Capital
has been stampeding out of most of these economies over the past few weeks, and a wave of new
sovereign defaults appears inevitable. These are extraordinary times. As the outbreak spreads,
more and more lives are disrupted. Though it is challenging, we must recognize the urgency of
the moment we are in and do our best to adapt—both to the essential social distancing measures
being put in place around the world, and to the personal tumult it is creating in all our lives. The
COVID-19 pandemic is inflicting high and rising human costs worldwide, and the necessary
protection measures are severely impacting economic activity. As a result of the pandemic, the
global economy is projected to contract sharply by –3 present in 2020, much worse than during
the 2008–09 financial crisis. In a baseline scenario--which assumes that the pandemic fades in
the second half of 2020 and containment efforts can be gradually unwound—the global economy
is projected to grow by 5.8 present in 2021 as economic activity normalizes, helped by policy
support.2
2
https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/Issues/2020/04/14/weo-april-2020
3
WHO
2
Figure Source:WHO
Globally, as of 2:00am CEST, 21 April 2020, there have been 2,402,250 confirmed cases of
COVID-19, including 163,097 deaths, reported to WHO.
3
THE SITUATION (PROBLEM)
Several industries have been adversely impacted due to the spread of COVID-19 globally. This
year, in early March, the Institute for International Finance had said that global economic growth
could turn out to be as low as 1%, and this was even before the OPEC club and Russia fell out on
production agreements to maintain stable oil prices. Oil prices have had a free fall, sending stock
markets into a tizzy. The UN‘s United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD), said the virus outbreak could cost the global economy up to $2-trillion this year and
that the pandemic could cause a recession in some countries causing global economic growth to
clock in below 2.5%.4 We are facing a global health crisis unlike any in the 100-year history, one
that is killing people, spreading human suffering, and upending people‘s lives. But this is much
more than a health crisis. It is a human, economic and social crisis.
The worst is over. Transmission in China has slowed already. Although some isolated outbreaks
occur elsewhere, these do not create a massive spread of the disease. As the global number of
cases stabilizes, China‘s economy returns to normal, and there is little impact outside of some
areas such as Iran that are not important for the global economy
Year of the virus. Although the spread of the disease in China slows, outbreaks occur on a
rolling basis around the world. Each outbreak requires slowing production in that area, and in a
globalized world, that means rolling disruptions to different regions and industries as outbreaks
occur and are controlled. The overall impact is to disrupt economic activity enough to slow
global growth substantially. Businesses that are nimble enough to manage switching suppliers
and that have enough liquidity to survive periods of low sales and revenue will have a
competitive advantage.
Global pandemic response. Economic centres around the world are subject to Wuhan-style
shutdowns as people panic over the spread of the virus. Uncoordinated decisions on a country-
by-country basis disrupt the movement of both people and goods. Global manufacturing
declines, as businesses with international supply chains can operate only intermittently. Tourism
and related businesses decline sharply, and tourism-based businesses and regions suffer. It takes
more than a year for the World Health Organization and the United Nations to develop an
accepted global response. Global GDP stagnates, international trade falls, and a global recession
is a distinct possibility.
Financial crisis. Delayed shipments and production schedules create financial problems for
companies with heavy debts, throughout the world. The decline in global equity markets and
4
The Hindu, March 15,2020
4
flight from risk—investors selling assets such as high-yield bonds and volatile stocks—exposes
investors who have under-priced risk.
Better outcomes are possible, especially with greater international cooperation. But on the
present trajectory, the post-virus world economy will be one of subdued growth, more fragility,
and greater division
The problem with current predictions is no one knows how long the virus will remain potent,
how authorities around the world are able to stanch new cases and the resources they pull out to
5
World Economic Situation and Prospects: April 2020 Briefing, No. 136
6
https://www.statista.com/topics/6139/covid-19-impact-on-the-global-economy/
5
treat old ones. What business hates is uncertainty and uncertainty is the only thing that abounds
when it comes to predictions about the vitality, endurance and longevity of the new virus.
Since the COVID-19 threat first emerged, economists have debated whether the shock to the
global economy will be ‗temporary‘ or ‗permanent‘. In the more optimistic ‗temporary shock‘
view, the virus will eventually pass, and economic life can then largely go back to normal.
Massive fiscal and monetary expansion programs in Western countries will keep the economy
afloat in the interim — with government balance sheets socialising the costs of economic
hibernation. Government debt will be much higher in the aftermath. But incredibly low
borrowing costs will keep this sustainable.
The analysis by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) said the COVID-19
pandemic is disrupting global supply chains and international trade. With nearly 100 countries
closing national borders during the past month, the movement of people and tourism flows have
come to a screeching halt. "Millions of workers in these countries are facing the bleak prospect
of losing their jobs. Governments are considering and rolling out large stimulus packages to
avert a sharp downturn of their economies which could potentially plunge the global economy
into a deep recession. In the worst-case scenario, the world economy could contract by 0.9 per
cent in 2020," the DESA said, adding that the world economy had contracted by 1.7 per cent
during the global financial crisis in 2009. It added that the contraction could be even higher if
governments fail to provide income support and help boost consumer spending.
The analysis noted that before the outbreak of the COVID-19, world output was expected to
expand at a modest pace of 2.5 per cent in 2020, as reported in the World Economic Situation
and Prospects 2020. Taking into account rapidly changing economic conditions, the UN DESA's
World Economic Forecasting Model has estimated best and worst-case scenarios for global
growth in 2020.
The three important Economic impact of COVID-19 could affect the global economy through:
1. Direct impact on production. Production has already been substantially affected by the
shutdown in global areas. Some other countries are also beginning to feel a direct impact as their
authorities put in place similar measures. The slowdown or lockdown in many countries has
effects on exporters to other countries. According to the World Bank even without new
outbreaks of the disease, these areas will likely experience slow growth in the first half of 2020.
2. Supply chain and market disruption. Many manufacturing firms rely on imported
intermediate inputs from China and other countries affected by the disease. Many companies also
rely on sales in China to meet financial goals. The slowdown in economic activity—and
transportation restrictions—in affected countries will likely have an impact on the production
and profitability of specific global companies, particularly in manufacturing and in raw materials
used in manufacturing.
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3. Financial impact on firms and financial markets. Temporary disruptions of inputs and/or
production might stress some firms, particularly those with inadequate liquidity. Traders in
financial markets may or may not correctly anticipate or understand which firms might be
vulnerable. The resulting rise in risk might reveal that one or more key financial market players
have taken investment positions that are unprofitable under current conditions, further weakening
trust in financial instruments and markets. A possible event would be a significant financial
market disruption as participants become concerned about counterparty risk.
The COVID-19 pandemic represents an unprecedented disruption to the global economy and
world trade, as production and consumption are scaled back across the globe. The IMF‘s January
Outlook repeated such sentiments albeit with a small growth downgrade from its October figures
because of a slower return to normal in leading emerging economies. Still, the combination of an
almost constant growth rate of 6% in China, an easing of trade tensions and a presumed
acceleration of major commodity-exporting countries was expected to push global growth in
2020 up to 2.7 per cent, despite the continued weak growth performance of developed
economies. Now that the Covid-19 shock has changed the scenario all forecasts for 2020 are
being revised downward.
With a percentage point drop in global growth costing some $900bn in lost income, most
forecasts have wiped a trillion dollars of global income for this year and if growth comes in at
1.7 per cent the cost of the virus will be closer to 2 trillion dollars.
7
World services trade growth continued to weaken toward the end of 2019 and into the first
quarter of 2020 according to the WTO‘s Services Trade Barometer, released on 11 March 2020.
The latest reading of 96.8 is down from the 98.4 recorded last September and well below the
baseline value of 100 for the index.7 Among the component indices, the largest declines were in
passenger air travel (93.5) and container shipping (94.3), growth of which was already
moderating before the COVID-19 outbreak. Both indices cover developments through January
and may partly reflect early efforts to halt the spread of the disease, which intensified toward the
end of the month. The drop in the container shipping index was driven by lower shipping
volumes in Asia while the slowdown in passenger air travel was more broad-based, also covering
North America, South America and Europe. The global financial transactions (97.7) and ICT
services (97.0) indices also dipped below trend, while the construction index (99.8) appears to
have held steady. The global services Purchasing Managers' Index (96.1) is the most forward-
looking barometer component, reflecting expectations that COVID-19 is likely to continue to
weigh on services trade in the near-term.
Fears of the exponential spread of the virus—and growing uncertainties about the efficacy of
various containment measures—have rocked financial markets worldwide, with market volatility
7
WTO Trade Barometer
8
surpassing its peak during the global financial crisis and equity markets and oil prices plunging
to multi-year lows.8
According to The Economist Intelligence Unit the growth outlook for 2020 appears bleak,
the U.S.-EU trade war, and the U.S.-Iran conflict as the biggest threats to the global economy;
global growth is forecast to be 2.9% in 2020, close to decade lows. The EIU expects economic
growth in the developed world to slow in 2020, driven by a moderation in the U.S. growth. The
emergence of a novel coronavirus in China will dampen Asia‘s growth perspectives. The social
unrest seen across the world in 2019 looks set to continue in 2020 and will challenge both
policy-makers and business models.
Urgent and bold policy measures are needed, not only to contain the pandemic and save lives,
but also to protect the most vulnerable in our societies from economic ruin and to sustain
economic growth and financial stability.
Fiscal Issues
Rich countries have introduced massive health and public spending programs to counter the
economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. For poorer countries, the options for fiscal and
monetary responses are more limited, and present ideas for the role that international
organizations can play in helping them. Most developed countries have made massive economic
responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, ramping up spending and using monetary policy to
cushion the blow of lockdowns and other measures that have shut down businesses and left huge
numbers unemployed. But for developing countries, which are now starting to respond to the
crisis more aggressively, such options may be more limited. Plan, organize, and implement the
approach to manage business continuity during the range of possible scenarios that could result
from the COVID-19 crisis. Ensure continued revenue collection and agencies‘ operations to help
finance and implement governments‘ responses to the crisis.
In response to the escalating health emergency and rapidly deteriorating economic outlook,
national authorities and multilateral entities worldwide are considering unprecedented policy
measures. Central banks across developed and developing countries have moved aggressively to
help stave off the crisis, slashing interest rates, injecting liquidity and providing emergency
funding for firms and households. Since the outbreak of the crisis, about 60 different monetary
8
World Economic Situation And Prospects: April 2020 Briefing, No. 136
9
authorities have cut their policy rates, often at emergency meetings. Direct wage or income
support measures can play an important role in limiting the socio-economic effects in the short
run, while preserving the capacity to recover promptly. Such measures include tax deferrals,
government-subsidized short-term work schemes, moratoriums on mortgage payments and direct
cash payments. Importantly, social protection programmes need to reach the most in need during
the crisis, with a focus on the elderly and those in vulnerable employment.
Governments must address basic supply and demand issues to prevent shortages, price spikes,
and suffering in the short term. It is essential to ensure the production and distribution of food
and medicines, which in turn requires keeping transportation and basic public services (water,
energy, and communications) up and running. The crisis-management office must establish
committees with the private sector and operators in key areas to monitor daily the flow of crucial
goods and services, and the health of workers and critical personnel.
To avoid a run on the domestic currency from the expanded money supply, governments will
most likely have to establish controls on transactions in foreign currency. The government must
be able to manage foreign reserves, calculating the cash flow needed to finance the imports of
food, medicines, energy, and other basic materials for at least six months, while considering the
flows of external debt.
International organizations are important actors in the critical episodes of international politics,
with power in mediation, dispute resolution, peace keeping, applying sanctions and others. They
also help in managing various key areas of international concern, from global health policy to the
monetary policies around the world (Abbott and Snidal, 1998). The COVID-19 crisis has
demonstrated just how crucial multilateral institutions are to our collective health, prosperity, and
security. The efforts of the wider United Nations, the World Bank Group, and other international
and regional organizations as they come together in a coordinated, coherent whole to respond to
the wider socio-economic impacts of the crisis.
International organizations must call for further rounds of ―unconventional monetary policies‖
coordinated with fiscal stimulus in developing countries, as discussed above, allowing them the
policy space to decide how to do this. They should also encourage leaders in developing
countries to establish a central crisis management office as outlined above. We need seek to
ensure adequate financing from international organizations to contain the pandemic and protect
people, with particular attention to the most vulnerable. Better outcomes are possible, especially
with greater international cooperation. But on the present trajectory, the post-virus world
10
economy will be one of subdued growth, more fragility, and greater division. The International
Monetary Fund, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the G7, G20,
the World Bank and Regional Development Banks need to support focused, efficient and impact-
proven measures to economies in need to address the health, economic, employment and social
impact of the pandemic for workers in all sectors of the economy including the self-employed
and non-permanent, casual and informal workers, and all of business, especially small and
medium enterprises (SMEs). For this, the global economy needs urgent measures and policies
that reach the real economy. 9
Foreign direct investment (FDI) has become an important factor in bringing capital, as well as
jobs, technology and management skills to many developing countries. Some developing
countries have seen major benefits from these investments in terms of economic development
and rising standards of living. FDI can also play a significant role in financing the achievement
of the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030 in basic infrastructure, food security, climate
change mitigation and adaptation, health and education. To do so, Governments need to mobilize
private investment more efficiently, channel it into sustainable development sectors and
maximize its positive economic, social and environmental impacts.
Conclusion
We must take a careful look at market signals across asset classes, recession and recovery patterns,
as well as the history of epidemics and shocks, to glean insights into the path ahead. Urgent and
bold policy measures are needed, not only to contain the pandemic and save lives, but also to
protect the most vulnerable in our societies from economic ruin and to sustain economic growth
and financial stability. International organizations must call for further rounds of
―unconventional monetary policies‖ coordinated with fiscal stimulus in developing countries, as
discussed above, allowing them the policy space to decide how to do this. Foreign direct
investment (FDI) has become an important factor in bringing capital, as well as jobs, technology
and management skills to many developing countries. Some developing countries have seen
major benefits from these investments in terms of economic development and rising standards of
living.
9
https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_dialogue/---actrav/documents/genericdocument/wcms_739522.pdf
11
Reference
IFPRI COVID-19 Blog Series
World Economic Situation And Prospects: April 2020 Briefing, No. 136
IMF Policy Paper
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/
The COVID-19 Crisis: Accentuating the Need to Bridge Digital Divides
UNCTAD
WTO
About Author
Secretary General
Krityanand UNESCO Club, Jamshedpur
(United Nations ECOSOC Accredited NGO)
knunesco@yahoo.com
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