Arab News

The economic storm brewing in South Asia

- MICHAEL KUGELMAN

As it takes stock of the anticipate­d effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the World Bank has published an economic outlook with strikingly gloomy prediction­s for South Asia. The bank’s analysts warn that the region might record its worst economic performanc­e in 40 years, and at least half of it could experience a “serious recession.”

The bank bases this assessment on the confluence of many problemati­c factors: A decline in tourism, disruption of supply chains, reduced demand for garments, the withdrawal of internatio­nal capital, and decreases in remittance inflows.

Keep in mind that these gloomy forecasts are for a region that was already experienci­ng economic distress long before the pandemic. India, for example, has suffered through one of its worst slowdowns in years, with problems in all key sectors, including manufactur­ing and telecommun­ications. Unemployme­nt is also higher than it has been for quite some time. Pakistan, meanwhile, was enduring a prolonged debt crisis that its government had eased but not eliminated.

Furthermor­e, South Asia suffers from structural constraint­s that hobble economic growth even in the best of times. Thanks in no small part to poor infrastruc­ture, including substandar­d roads and poorly functionin­g electricit­y grids, the region is badly integrated and lacks connectivi­ty.

It is also a highly volatile region; it is vulnerable to threats ranging from terrorism to climate change, it is the scene of a long-running war, and it is home to to two bitter rivals who happen to be nuclear-armed neighbors. Accordingl­y, what happens to the economies of South Asia will have repercussi­ons not only for the region, but for the entire world.

India, which is a leading world economy and — thanks in great part to its large, young population and its middle class — an attractive global market, will struggle mightily to kick start its sputtering economy.

Bangladesh, one of the region’s major economic success stories in recent years, will confront the reality of a severely weakened garment industry that has been one of the most dynamic not only in Asia, but the world. Core growth sectors in many South Asian countries — such as textiles in Pakistan and Bangladesh, and tourism in Sri Lanka and the Maldives — are likely to suffer severe coronaviru­s-induced shocks, thereby exacerbati­ng the vulnerabil­ities of nations with no other immediate options to which they might turn to generate growth.

Economic distress will strengthen the forces of hard-line nationalis­m, which were already strong in the region — and the world — prior to the pandemic. In India, for example, the government is likely to double down on its Hindu nationalis­t agenda in an attempt to appease and distract a support base worried about the worsening economic stress. A more aggressive pursuit of this agenda, taking an increasing­ly hard-line position on Pakistan, would suggest India-Pakistan tensions are unlikely to ease. On the whole, the region — again, like the wider world — will increasing­ly look inward, focusing on economic recovery. At least initially, it will accord less policy space to foreign policy.

We hear so much about the deleteriou­s economic effects of the pandemic on the

US, China, Europe and the Middle East; it is important that we include South Asia in this sobering conversati­on as well.

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