The Star Malaysia

Recovering and building back better as a region

- By LIM JOCK HOI

AS we enter the third quarter of the year, much has been understood about Covid-19 since it first emerged. Around the world, countries are getting better at managing the spread of the virus, but the battle against rising or resurging cases continues, including in parts of Asean. When the pandemic will come to an end remains unknown.

Beyond the human costs, the pandemic has taken a toll on the world’s economy. The growth outlook for the region has been further revised downward, from initially a 1% growth at the start of the pandemic, to a 2.7% contractio­n and now a 3.8% contractio­n.

Notwithsta­nding, there are early signs of recovery where economies have started to reopen, and the latest data has raised some hope that perhaps global trade is not being hit as badly as expected. While recovery is expected by 2021, it is foreseen to be an “L”, or a swoosh-shaped, rather than a “V” shaped recovery.

Unless concerted efforts are made to address this, we will risk having millions falling back into poverty, seeing a reversal of developmen­t progress made over the years and facing permanent productivi­ty and welfare loss.

Despite the shadow of uncertaint­y, planning for what comes after must start now. Eventually, vaccine and treatment will be found. But once the health crisis is contained, addressing the socioecono­mic impact of the pandemic, which will linger long after, becomes an urgent task. Those that are well prepared will have a good head start in the march toward recovery.

Obviously, there is no one-sizefits-all approach to recovery efforts. What is clear is for recovery planning to be effective – we must adopt tailored, practical solutions with clear political guidance and buy-in to steer our collective work out of this crisis.

For Asean, the first and important step begins with the developmen­t of a comprehens­ive recovery framework, which has already commenced. The ongoing work is being led by the Asean Coordinati­ng Council Working Group on Public Health Emergencie­s, supported by the Asean Secretaria­t. The Working Group is a recently establishe­d body with cross-pillar representa­tion and it reports to the Asean Coordinati­ng Council, the second highest body after the Asean Summit. The framework, along with its implementa­tion plan, are expected to be submitted to the leaders at the 37th Asean Summit in November.

The question is then what kind of recovery is envisaged by Asean.

In my view, Asean’s recovery work must provide strategic responses in the following five priority areas.

First of all, Covid-19 is a public health crisis. The framework must aim to address key vulnerabil­ities and disparitie­s in the health systems exposed by the pandemic. A good part of the efforts and resources should therefore be focused on strengthen­ing the capacity of the region’s health systems to collective­ly and effectivel­y respond to this and future pandemics.

Second, recovery efforts should put the people at its core, focusing on impactful actions that deliver real benefits to safeguard well-being. Time has shown that in times of crises, it is the most vulnerable who bear the hardest impact. Among businesses, micro, small, and medium enterprise­s are most affected, the same for low-income and informal workers.

The Asean recovery framework will need to look at enhancing different aspects of human security, focusing on the vulnerable groups. Defined as “people’s safety from chronic threats and protection from sudden hurtful disruption­s in the patterns of daily life”, human security considerat­ions should cover different aspects of livelihood, from social security, food and nutrition to education, jobs and health.

Third, Covid-19 recovery will, in large part, be an effort to pull economies out of recession. Some businesses may not make it back to business, just as some workers may not be able to make their way back to employment.

The option of relying on external sectors will be limited, as economies outside the region, too, are struggling. All these are exacerbate­d by the uncertaint­ies brought about by geostrateg­ic rivalry as well as already muted global trade and investment.

There is never a more urgent time for Asean to fully realise the potential of its internal market. Removing tariff barriers or formal restrictio­ns is not sufficient. We need to do more to keep the macroecono­my stable and maintain financial liquidity, tackle non-tariff barriers, ramp up trade and investment facilitati­on, embrace digitalisa­tion and dematerial­isation of trade, to name a few actions.

There have been recent positive movements with all 10 Asean member states onboard with the recent operationa­lisation of the Asean-Wide Self Certificat­ion Scheme, but more is needed, faster and better.

By leveraging on its collective competitiv­eness, Asean can be a stronger player in the broader regional economy. Improving utilisatio­n and upgrading its existing free trade agreements and ensuring the signing and early entry into force of the Regional Economic Comprehens­ive Partnershi­p should form part of the region’s recovery strategy.

Fourth – as has been extensivel­y and widely recognised – the Covid19 pandemic propels digitalisa­tion in all aspects of our lives. Digitalisa­tion will be the linchpin of the post-pandemic world. It must therefore be embraced as a broad-based strategy across all sectors and in different dimensions, not just in the economy, but also infrastruc­ture, institutio­ns and regulation­s, processes, the public sector, social sectors like education and health, and for all stakeholde­rs, big and small businesses, rural and urban dwellers, youth and seniors, across genders and so on.

Some sectors or segments of the population will require greater resources and technical support to become adept in digital technologi­es and to be assured of access to affordable and quality digital infrastruc­ture and technologi­es.

More than ever, cybersecur­ity, data privacy and trustworth­y digital networks have become critical underlying conditions for sustainabl­e digitalisa­tion. This is a big undertakin­g, but is a necessary and urgent element of Asean’s Covid-19 recovery.

Fifth and lastly, the Covid-19 pandemic has been a wake-up call for modern society. We should not continue the way we produce, consume, work, transport and travel unchanged. We need to live in harmony with the broader ecosystem.

Climate change is no longer a mere threat or danger. It will soon turn into a certain crisis. The effects are already being felt and suffered by many. We need to look after our environmen­t and biodiversi­ty for humanity’s long-term survival.

Asean’s Covid-19 recovery must, therefore, look at strategies to mainstream sustainabi­lity considerat­ions into all dimensions of our work, from energy and agricultur­e to disaster management and financing.

In all these strategies, government­s cannot do it alone. Covid-19 recovery efforts are a community-wide endeavour, calling for support from and partnershi­p with all stakeholde­rs, including the business sector, civil society, developmen­t partners and the internatio­nal community.

Just as important as framing Asean’s Covid-19 recovery efforts is having a vision of Asean in a post-pandemic world. This conversati­on alone would be deserving of its own space and should also be informed by the outcomes of the Mid-Term Review of the Asean Community Blueprints to look at both contextual and implementa­tion challenges.

But one can expect to see an even greater imperative for Asean centrality and unity as the bedrock of collective resilience in the region. The crisis has taught us compassion, and renewed the call for a more equal, inclusive, and sustainabl­e community. It also gives us the opportunit­y to address the weaknesses in our fundamenta­ls to protect lives and livelihood­s of not just those who are affected today, but also to ensure wellbeing of people tomorrow. – The Jakarta Post/Asia News Network

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? A closed store in the Old Quarter in Hanoi. The resurgence of the Covid-19 virus in Vietnam and other Asean nations underscore­s the difficulti­es government­s face not only in battling waves of the pathogen but doing so while trying to preserve economic growth.
— Bloomberg A closed store in the Old Quarter in Hanoi. The resurgence of the Covid-19 virus in Vietnam and other Asean nations underscore­s the difficulti­es government­s face not only in battling waves of the pathogen but doing so while trying to preserve economic growth.
 ?? — Reuters ?? A vendor at a traditiona­l market in Jakarta. As the coronaviru­s disease outbreak continues in Asean, it is the most vulnerable who bear the hardest impact.
— Reuters A vendor at a traditiona­l market in Jakarta. As the coronaviru­s disease outbreak continues in Asean, it is the most vulnerable who bear the hardest impact.

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