National Post

DIGITAL ECONOMY GETS ITS STRESS TEST

- Enda Curran

The lockdown gripping much of the world economy has spurred a real- time stress test of the long-heralded digital future. Virtual brown bag lunches have replaced office gatherings; schools have rushed out internet- based learning; the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund last week held its Spring meetings online; and the U. S. Supreme Court for the first time will hear arguments by telephone and allow live audio broadcasts.

Virus lockdowns have seen millions lose their jobs as waiters, flight attendants, Pilates instructor­s and other service providers are shuttered. That means sustaining those sectors that can function online has never been more important for a global economy facing one of its darkest periods since the Great Depression.

Gauging the exact size of the digital economy isn’t easy: The United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t estimates a range of 4.5 per cent to 15.5 per cent of global gross domestic product. While that varies by country, it’s clear the companies and nations which can migrate the most commerce online will go some way to cushioning the damage.

“The futurists are going to have a field day,” said Mark Herlach an internatio­nal lawyer at Eversheds Sutherland LLP in Washington D. C. “It will change the way we build our cities, the way we move around in those cities and that in turn changes our energy use. A whole series of knock- on effects are coming.”

Herlach — who has had to steer negotiatio­ns between clients and government from his home and has used video happy hours and dinner parties to stay in touch with colleagues and friends — is positive on the experience so far, but worries about a lingering sense of isolation if more opt to work remotely once the lockdowns ease.

Cheaper internet connectivi­ty has enabled explosive growth in online tools, allowing many white collar roles to be done at home and keeping managers and business owners in touch with their staff.

Users of Microsoft Teams soared to a new daily record of 2.7 billion meeting minutes in one day, a 200 per cent increase from 900 million on March 16, the company said on April 9. Even amid security concerns, Zoom has gone from being used by 10 million office workers a day to more than 200 million people.

“‘ Zooming’ has become a new verb,” said Michael Bowes, a barrister and joint head of Outer Temple Chambers in London.

He and his colleagues hold a Virtual Tea Zoom Group at 4 p.m. every Wednesday, where everyone brings their own tea and cake for a chat about non-work issues.

Some companies are eyeing how they’ll change operations when the virus dissipates. Some are looking at cutting travel and real estate budgets in favour of investing in better technology and home office set ups, said Satish Shankar, regional managing partner of Bain & Company Asia-pacific.

“We are poised for a dramatic wanton increase of the digitaliza­tion of our economies,” he said.

Online government services, fibre internet connection and the share of people who already work from home indicate Scandinavi­an nations score highly in terms of online readiness. In tech rich economies such as Japan and South Korea, the sectors most impacted can’t readily switch to a remote stance, according to London based HSBC economist James Pomeroy.

Ed Yardeni, who coined the term “bond vigilantes” in the 1980s, dedicated a recent research note to clients on how he has adjusted to a world of meetings and cocktails over video link during what he calls the great virus crisis, or GVC.

“Technology has become a GVC staple, right up there with food and toilet paper,” wrote the president and chief investment strategist of Yardeni Research Inc.

Perhaps no sector has been as upended as education, with school closures affecting 90 per cent of the world’s students, or more than 1.5 billion people according to UNESCO. That has forced teachers to scramble online courses with little warning, and parents are forced to adapt their working schedule around their children’s needs.

Exam timetables have been threatened as authoritie­s grapple with cancelling or postponing critical final year exams, or basing grades on past performanc­e.

Wong Mo Yee, a primary school teacher and a member of the Hong Kong Profession­al Teachers’ Union executive committee where schools have been shut for months, said the crisis highlighte­d the need for clear goals about what should be taught at home instead of rigidly sticking with the in-class room curriculum. She also flagged dangers of too much screen time.

“Home learning is completely different, the interactio­n is different, the dynamic in the so- called video classes is also different,” Wong said. “It’s not so easy to engage students in video teaching.”

Poorer children have been hardest hit, where families either have to share devices or don’t have them at all. Families where parents have to leave home for work and cannot supervise their child’s learning have had it tougher still.

“The longer children are out of school and not learning, the increased likelihood they will never return to school,” said Heather Simpson, chief program officer of Room to Read.

Manufactur­ers have also discovered the limitation­s of tech. One of them is Colin Ng, co-founder of Hong Kong- based Lincogn Technology Co. that designs and makes smart home appliances such as facial recognitio­n door locks and mobile phone-controlled lights for the Hong Kong, China, U. S. and European markets.

Travel restrictio­ns on the border between Hong Kong and mainland China have disrupted the main artery between Ng’s small R&D team in Hong Kong and the company’s manufactur­ing staff in neighbouri­ng Guangdong. That has complicate­d the process for when a product is meant to move from the R&D laboratory to the factory floor.

“Video conferenci­ng the discussion is very difficult,” Ng said. “It is difficult to explain a lot of the detail through the camera, the conversati­on becomes very inefficien­t.”

Joerg Wuttke, president of the European Chamber of Commerce in China and a veteran of doing business in the world’s second-biggest economy, said remote working can only do so much for those in due diligence, sales or manufactur­ing. “Companies are pushing the envelope,” Wuttke said. “But at the end of the day someone still has to get the coal and oil out of the ground and put solar panels together.”

There have been other strains, too. Surging web usage prompted U. S. President Donald Trump to hold talks with telecom giants to ensure the networks could cope. In Europe, Amazon, Netflix and Youtube had to reduce the quality of video streams to ensure networks can handle increased usage.

“Quarantine­s and lockdowns for such long periods would have been near impossible to impose and bear without the tech devices available today,” said Chua Hak Bin, senior economist at Maybank Kim Eng Research Pte. in Singapore.

IT WILL CHANGE THE WAY WE BUILD OUR CITIES, THE WAY WE MOVE AROUND IN THOSE CITIES AND THAT IN TURN CHANGES OUR ENERGY USE. A WHOLE SERIES OF KNOCK- ON EFFECTS ARE COMING. — MARK HERLACH, INTERNATIO­NAL LAWYER AT EVERSHEDS SUTHERLAND LL P.

 ?? Justin
Sulivan
/ Gett
y Images ?? The coronaviru­s pandemic has emptied streets and highways as workers are either laid off or working from home, an unintended experiment with the digital economy.
Justin Sulivan / Gett y Images The coronaviru­s pandemic has emptied streets and highways as workers are either laid off or working from home, an unintended experiment with the digital economy.

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