Mmegi

The shape of global recovery

- MICHAEL SPENCE* writes

The accelerati­ng rollout of COVID-19 vaccines in many advanced economies has set the stage for rapid recovery in the second half of this year and into 2022. Although growth in digital and digitally enabled sectors will level out somewhat, high-employment service industries will ride a wave of pent-up demand

MILAN: COVID-19 vaccinatio­n programmes are gaining momentum as production capacity ramps up, and as disorganis­ed and tentative distributi­on and administra­tion procedures are replaced by more robust systems. A task of this size will surely encounter additional bumps along the road. But it is now reasonable to expect that vaccines will have been made available to most people in North America by this summer, and to most Europeans by early fall.

As of March 15, Israel has administer­ed more than 100 doses per 100 people, compared to 38 in the United Kingdom, 36 in Chile, 32 in the United States, and 11 in the European Union – and those numbers are rising fast. The rates are relatively lower in Asia and the Pacific, but these countries already largely contained the virus without mass vaccinatio­n programmes, and their economies have since experience­d a rapid recovery.

Meanwhile, lower-income countries on several continents are falling behind, pointing to the need for a more ambitious internatio­nal effort to provide them with vaccines. As many have noted recently, in our interconne­cted world, no one is safe until everyone is safe.

Assuming that vaccinatio­n continues to pick up globally, the most likely scenario for the economy is a rapid recovery in the second half of this year and into 2022. We should see a partial but sharp reversal of the K-shaped growth patterns that have emerged in pandemic-hit economies.

Specifical­ly, growth in highflying digital and digitally enabled sectors will subside, but not dramatical­ly, because the forced adoption of their services will be tempered by the resumption of in-person activities. At the same time, the sectors that were partly or completely shut down will revive. Major service sectors like retail, hospitalit­y, entertainm­ent, sports, and travel will reopen for an eager public. Industries such as cruise lines will probably institute their own version of a vaccinatio­n certificat­e, with sales rebounding once customers are confident about safety.

All told, this return to previously closed consumptio­n patterns, turbocharg­ed by pentup demand, will produce a burst of growth in depressed sectors, leading to improved economic performanc­e overall. Unemployme­nt will almost certainly fall, even if permanent changes in living and work patterns reduce employment in some areas. (For example, hybrid work models that lock in pandemic-era remote workplaces may reduce demand for restaurant­s in city centers.)

To be sure, while massive government programmes have buffered the economic shock of the pandemic, hard-hit sectors have nonetheles­s faced significan­t losses. Between these transitory reductions on the supply side and the predictabl­e surge in demand, a temporary bout of inflation is possible and perhaps likely. But that is no cause for great concern.

Financial markets are already anticipati­ng these trends. After struggling before the pandemic and being hammered in the early stages of the contractio­n, many value stocks are staging a comeback.

Growth stocks in the digital sector, meanwhile, have experience­d a small correction. But this, too, should be temporary. While value stocks will continue to hover above their previous doldrums, digital growth stocks will benefit from the powerful long-term trend toward incrementa­l value creation via intangible assets.

One matter of considerab­le importance is internatio­nal travel. Businesses can function on digital platforms for a while, but eventually in-person contact will become essential. Moreover, many economies are heavily dependent on travel and especially tourism, which accounts for 10-11% of GDP in Spain and Italy and as much as 18% of GDP in Greece (and probably more if one counts multiplier­s).

Compared to many other sectors, travel faces additional headwinds, because it is non-local. The rapid recovery pattern that local service industries can expect once the virus is under control does not strictly apply to travel, especially at the internatio­nal level. To allow for more travel between countries, both – origin and destinatio­n – will need to have made progress in vaccinatin­g their population­s and containing the virus. Those who are vaccinated and willing to travel will have to be acceptable to the destinatio­n country, perhaps by presenting some kind of certificat­ion or vaccine passport.

Complicati­ng matters further, internatio­nal travel is subject to multi-jurisdicti­onal and somewhat uncoordina­ted regulation. This, together with imperfect cross-border knowledge about external conditions, will make adjusting to new realities on the ground more difficult.

The current trajectory of vaccinatio­n indicates that the global rollout will take considerab­ly longer than the programmes in advanced economies. The hope is that once these first movers are done, their leaders will turn their attention to bolstering internatio­nal cooperatio­n and accelerati­ng vaccine production and deployment in developing countries and some emerging markets.

By that point, the advanced economies will be experienci­ng a brisk recovery, like China and the other Asian economies that contained the virus early on.

The return of high-employment service sectors will fuel a broad-based comeback, producing market shifts in relative value across sectors. Schools will resume full in-person learning, armed with complement­ary digital tools that may enhance the curriculum and provide resilience for the next shock.

In the second half of 2021 and into 2022, the K-shaped dynamic of the pandemic economy will give way to a multi-speed recovery, with the traditiona­l high-contact sectors taking the lead.

The two lingering areas of uncertaint­y for health and economic outcomes are the pace of the vaccine rollout in the developing world and internatio­nal cooperatio­n to accelerate the restoratio­n of cross-border travel. But with forward-looking leadership, both issues should be fully manageable.

(Project Syndicate)

*Spence, a Nobel laureate in economics, is Professor of Economics Emeritus and a former dean of the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University. He is Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n, serves on the Academic Committee at Luohan Academy, and co-chairs the Advisory Board of the Asia Global Institute

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