Toronto Star

EU forecasts ‘recession of historic proportion­s’

Unemployme­nt rate predicted to rise, euro to see record decline

- LORNE COOK

The European Union predicted Wednesday “a recession of historic proportion­s this year” due to the impact of the coronaviru­s as it released its first official estimates of the damage the pandemic is inflicting on the bloc’s economy.

The 27-nation EU economy is predicted to contract by 7.5 per cent this year, before growing about six per cent in 2021, assuming countries steadily ease their lockdowns.

The group of 19 nations using the euro as their currency will see a record decline of 7.75 per cent this year, and grow by 6.25 per cent in 2021, the European Commission said in its spring economic forecast.

“It is now quite clear that the EU has entered the deepest economic recession in its history,” EU Economy commission­er Paolo Gentiloni told reporters in Brussels.

As the virus hit, “economic activity in the EU dropped by around one third practicall­y overnight,” he said.

More than 1.1 million people have contracted the virus across Europe and over 137,000 have died, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Unclear outbreak data, low testing rates and the strain on health-care systems mean the true scale of the pandemic is much greater.

With the spread slowing in most European countries, people are cautiously venturing out from confinemen­t and gradually returning to work, but strict health measures remain in place amid concern of a second wave of outbreaks and any return to something like normal life is at least months away.

The pandemic has hurt consumer spending, industrial output, investment, trade, capital flows and supply chains. It has also hit jobs. The unemployme­nt rate across the 27-nation EU is forecast to rise from 6.7 per cent last year to nine per cent in 2020, but then fall to around eight per cent in 2021, the commission said. Beyond that, Gentiloni said, “we will have a massive drop in hours worked.”

Globally, the pandemic is expected to cause the deepest recession in living memory, with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund forecastin­g a three per cent decline this year. The UN says that is expected to cause a drop in work hours equivalent to 305 million full-time jobs.

Inflation in Europe is also set to be significan­tly weaker as consumer prices fall amid a sharp weakening of demand and drop in oil prices. Investment, too, is likely to contract, with firms expected to postpone or cancel their investment plans amid the uncertaint­y. Exporters will not be spared, with continued disruption to movements of people, goods and services likely.

Italy and Spain — two of the countries hardest hit by the virus — and to a lesser extent France are among the economies that will suffer most.

Greece, which largely escaped the disease, but whose economy was ravaged previously by its debt crisis and which relies heavily on tourism, is also high on the economic hit list.

France’s economy is expected to shrink by about 8.2 per cent, while Germany will endure a more-moderate contractio­n than most and recover better. Still, it is set to experience this year its worst recession since the Second World War, with exports notably hit, with a drop in output of 6.5 per cent.

While the virus hit every member country, the extent of the damage it ultimately inflicts will depend on the evolution of the disease in each of them, the resilience of their economies and what policies they put in place to respond.

Gentiloni said that the depth of the recession and the strength of recovery will be uneven across the world’s biggest trading bloc.

Much will depend, he said, on “the speed at which lockdowns can be lifted, the importance of services like tourism in each economy and by each country’s financial resources. Such divergence poses a threat to the single market and the euro area — yet it can be mitigated through decisive, joint European action.”

He noted that the unpredicta­bility surroundin­g the future spread of the coronaviru­s made drawing up the commission’s economic forecast “particular­ly challengin­g.” The numbers are based on the assumption that lockdowns will be gradually lifted from this month onward.

“A more severe and longer lasting pandemic than currently envisaged could cause a far larger fall in GDP than assumed,” the commission said. How quickly things can change. On Feb.13, the commission had predicted “a path of steady, moderate growth” this year and next of 1.2 per cent. At that time, uncertaint­y over U.S. trade policy and a Brexit trade deal plus tensions in Latin America and the Middle East were the main threats.

The coronaviru­s outbreak in China was noted at the time as “a new downside risk,” but the commission’s assumption less than three months ago was “that the outbreak peaks in the first quarter, with relatively limited global spillovers.”

 ?? PASCAL GUYOT AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman cleans and disinfects a classroom at a nursery school on Monday in Montpellie­r, France.
PASCAL GUYOT AFP/GETTY IMAGES A woman cleans and disinfects a classroom at a nursery school on Monday in Montpellie­r, France.

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