Fiji Sun

An Early View of the Economic Impact of Pandemic

- Feedback: Manufactur­ing maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj it is improving modestly. JOHN BLUEDORN, GITA GOPINATH, AND DAMIANO SANDRI INTERNATIO­NAL MONETARY FUND

The COVID-19 pandemic has pushed the world into a recession. For 2020 it will be worse than the global financial crisis. The economic damage is mounting across all countries, tracking the sharp rise in new infections and containmen­t measures put in place by government­s.

China was the first country to experience the full force of the disease, with confirmed active cases at over 60,000 by mid-February.

European countries such as Italy, Spain, and France are now in acute phases of the epidemic, followed by the United States where the number of active cases is growing rapidly. In many emerging market and developing economies, the epidemic appears to be just beginning.

Italy

In Italy, the first country in Europe to be severely hit, the government imposed a national lockdown on March 9 to contain the spread of the virus.

As a result, attendance in public places and electricit­y use have declined dramatical­ly, especially in the northern regions where infection rates have been considerab­ly higher. The economic consequenc­es of the pandemic are already impacting the United States with unpreceden­ted speed and severity.

In the last two weeks in March almost 10 million people applied for unemployme­nt benefits.

Such a sharp and staggering increase has never been seen before, not even at the peak of the global financial crisis in 2009.

Disruption­s caused by the virus are starting to ripple through emerging markets.

After showing little movement early in the year, the latest indices from purchasing manager surveys (PMIs) are pointing to sharp slowdowns in manufactur­ing output in many countries, reflecting drops in external demand and growing expectatio­ns of declining domestic demand.

China

On a positive note, China is seeing a modest improvemen­t in its PMI after sharp declines early in the year, despite weak external demand.

The modest improvemen­t in economic activity in China is reflected in daily satellite data on nitrogen dioxide concentrat­ions in the local atmosphere—a proxy for industrial and transport activity (but also the density of pollution as a by-product of fossil fuel consumptio­n).

After a steep decline from January to February during the acute phase of the pandemic, concentrat­ions have increased as new infections have fallen, allowing China to gradually relax its strict containmen­t measures.

Recovery

The recovery in China, albeit limited, is encouragin­g, suggesting that containmen­t measures can succeed in controllin­g the epidemic and pave the way for a resumption of economic activity.

But there is huge uncertaint­y about the future path of the pandemic and a resurgence of its spread in China and other countries cannot be ruled out.

To overcome this pandemic, we need a global, coordinate­d health and economic policy effort.

Support

The IMF—in collaborat­ion with other partners—is doing everything it can to ensure rapid support is available to impacted countries through emergency financing, policy advice, and technical assistance.

We will have more details on the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic when the IMF releases its World Economic Outlook on April 14.

 ??  ?? in emergimng markets is slowing down sharply but in China
New unemployem­ent claims in the United States soared in the second half of March.
in emergimng markets is slowing down sharply but in China New unemployem­ent claims in the United States soared in the second half of March.

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