Gulf News

Region must prepare for post-Covid-19 world

The Middle East as a whole needs a new approach to mitigate socio-economic effects of the pandemic

- BY OSAMA AL SHARIF | Osama Al Sharif is a journalist and political commentato­r based in Amman.

As the Arab world recovers, at various rates, from the effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic with surprising­ly low fatalities, attention is now shifting to dealing with the socio-economic impact of months of lockdown resulting in some cases in total shutdown of the economy.

According to a recent study by the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) preliminar­y estimates suggest that the region could lose $42 billion (Dh154 billion) of gross domestic product (GDP) as a result of the health related lockdown. The study also indicates that between January and mid-March 2020, businesses across the region have registered massive losses in market capital, in the order of $420 billion. That constitute­s loss of total regional wealth equivalent to 8 per cent.

Furthermor­e, the ESCWA study expects the unemployme­nt rate to increase by 1.2 percentage point, which translates to the loss of about 1.7 million jobs across the region. The steep decline in oil prices has cost the region $11 billion in net oil revenues from January to mid-March 2020. Various sectors have been especially affected such as the service sector, which includes travel and tourism, which is expected to suffer the most.

Some countries have responded early to the economic consequenc­es of the pandemic including the UAE which announced a $27 billion stimulus plan to boost the economy, while Saudi Arabia introduced a $13 billion stimulus package to support businesses and extend finance to small and medium enterprise­s. But the economic effects of the lockdown, the fall in oil prices and the longterm damage to certain sectors will be felt across the globe. In a globalised economy the reverberat­ions of slow or negative growth will affect all.

Many countries are unable to launch multi-billion-dollar stimulus plans to rescue their economies and must rely on regional and internatio­nal creditors for help.

Pandemic’s long term impact

Aside from sharing knowledge and experience in fighting the pandemic and coordinati­ng health measures, Arab countries must look at the medium and long term socio-economic impact of the pandemic on the region. Many countries are unable to launch multi-billion-dollar stimulus plans to rescue their economies and must rely on regional and internatio­nal creditors for help. Others will have to adjust to new socio-economic realities that include restructur­ing their foreign labour markets while speeding up the nationalis­ation process of local labour.

Aside from adjusting fiscal policies, diverting investment­s to boost the health sector and passing generous incentives to speed up the recovery of certain sectors like travel and tourism, government­s will have to review existing social safety nets to protect those who are affected the most by the forced closure of the economy.

No country can come up with all answers and responses on its own. There will be an urgent need to share informatio­n and exchange expertise while looking beyond the survival of an individual country in the wider region.

The effects of the pandemic lockdown have been described as the biggest global challenge since World War II. The world’s biggest and most buoyant economies have seen their economies shrink in the first and second quarters of this year.

The US is now officially in a recession and the question now is how long will that recession last? The Arab world will be affected in many ways by an almost imminent world recession. It is now that regional government­s must examine how the post-coronaviru­s world will look like.

Government­s can do so much on their own. Without active and positive participat­ion and partnershi­p by the private sector, a new vision for the future will be sorely lacking. Investment­s will have to be reviewed and redirected both domestical­ly and regionally.

A regional approach to new economic and social challenges will have to be adopted. Closing the gates and going into isolation will be counterpro­ductive. The crisis, as tough and unpreceden­ted as it is, also provides opportunit­ies for reform.

But some countries will have to adopt hard decisions to restructur­e their economies. Bulging public sectors cannot be supported anymore as sources of government revenue change in nature. Investment in the health sector must become a priority while strengthen­ing social safety networks is now a priority to ensure societal stability.

The Arab world will be forced to change and government­s can either embrace that change or resist it. The old ways of doing business will simply not do anymore. As much as individual countries need to come up with their own solutions, the region as a whole needs a new approach in order to mitigate the socioecono­mic effects of the pandemic while preparing for a post-coronaviru­s world.

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Middle Eastern women resort to selling their gold as pandemic grinds on
SCAN ME Middle Eastern women resort to selling their gold as pandemic grinds on

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