La Semana

The World in 2021

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Year 2020 is ending with the world caught up in an unpreceden­ted human and economic crisis. The pandemic has contaminat­ed 75 million people and killed 1.7 million. With the lockdowns, the global economy has suffered the worst recession in 75 years, causing the loss of income for millions of people. In such a bleak environmen­t, what will the new year bring? Whilst uncertaint­y is the only certainty, eight points are likely to be key in the year ahead:

1. A gradual but uneven recovery

With the deployment of vaccines and public support, high-income countries will be on the path to recovery from the second half of 2021. However, middle income and particular­ly low income countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America will see recovery delayed – unless the UN or China provide them with sufficient COVID19 vaccines and government­s escalate public support. The more affected sectors – tourism, travel, hospitalit­y, entertainm­ent and labor intensive activities – will take longer to recover.

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2. More poverty and quality in 2021

While a few have benefited from the pandemic such as online shops, remote tools/software, pharmaceut­icals and medical services – the majority have not. The Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO) estimates that 590 million full-time jobs were lost during the last half of 2020.

3. More public health but unnecessar­y austerity cuts

A positive aspect of the pandemic is that the world has realized the need for public health systems – generally overburden­ed, underfunde­d and understaff­ed after a decade of austerity (2010-20). While public health expenditur­e will continue to rise, many are concerned about the threat of new austerity cuts.

4. Digitaliza­tion and changes in the world of work

The pandemic has accelerate­d technologi­cal change at the workplace. More telework and less office time will prevent women from having to choose between work and family and make fathers more involved in household responsibi­lities. Studies suggest that 47 percent of US companies will let employees work from home full-time after the pandemic. On the other hand, essential workers such as health workers, cleaning staff, delivery drivers or retail employees, will have more bargaining power in 2021, can press harder for better working conditions.

5. Redressing world disorder

US President-elect Biden will renew multilater­alism, the Paris treaty and other internatio­nal agreements, the defense of human rights and the interests of the Pax Americana. The UN will continue to struggle given low financing. Four years of Trumpism and fake news have left their mark upon the world, and despite democratic attempts to improve world order, 2021 will not yet see a reversal of the trend towards authoritar­ian nationalis­t .

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6. An opportunit­y on mate change

The world would need to replicate the emissions reductions seen in 2020 during the next decade to curb global warming to 1.5 degrees by the end of the century. However, low oil prices may delay investment in alternativ­e energy sources in 2021, even though these will replace fossil fuels in much of the world in the medium-term.

7. The risk of a new financial crisis will remain high in 2021

With industry and services stagnant, investment­s went to the under-regulated financial sector, where greater profits were to be made from speculatio­n. Stock markets will remain volatile but likely buoyant, de-linked from the real economy. However, rising bankruptci­es means that banking risks will increase significan­tly in 2021. 8. A new roaring 20s

After a year of lockdowns, people will want to make up for lost time and rush to parties, dinners, festivals, shows, sports and travel as soon as possible. The year 2021 may well flourish into a new summer of love, a creative existentia­l time – carpe diem! (IPS)

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