The Guardian Australia

A tale of two pandemics: the true cost of Covid in the global south

- Kwame Anthony Appiah

For the past year and a half, people everywhere have been in the grip of a pandemic – but not necessaril­y the same one. In the affluent world, a viral respirator­y disease, Covid-19, suddenly became a leading cause of death. In much of the developing world, by contrast, the main engine of destructio­n wasn’t this new disease, but its secondorde­r effects: measures they took, and we took, in response to the coronaviru­s. Richer nations and poorer nations differ in their vulnerabil­ities.

Whenever I talk with members of my family in Ghana, Nigeria and Namibia, I’m reminded that a global event can also be a profoundly local one. Lives and livelihood­s have been affected in these places very differentl­y from the way they have in Europe or the US. That’s true in the economic and educationa­l realm, but it’s true, too, in the realm of public health. And across all these realms, the stakes are often life or death.

The three countries I mentioned have a median age between 18 and 22 years, and the severity of Covid-19 discrimina­tes sharply by age. A big way that Covid can kill is by hampering the management of other diseases, such as HIV, malaria and TB. In Africa alone, 26 million people are living with HIV and, in a typical year, several hundreds of thousands die of it, while malaria, which is especially deadly to infants and toddlers, claims almost 400,000 lives.

Those are big numbers, and yet they used to be much bigger – a major healthcare effort brought them down. Amid the pandemic, though, people stopped visiting clinics, in part because it became harder to get to them, and

healthcare workers had to curtail their own movements. According to a Global Fund survey of 32 countries in Africa and Asia, prenatal care visits dropped by two-thirds between April and September 2020; consultati­ons for children under five dropped by three-quarters.

Public-health experts predict that, as an indirect consequenc­e of the Covid pandemic, twice as many people around the world could be at risk of dying from malaria. There could be 400,000 extra deaths from TB in the next few years, and half a million extra deaths from HIV. Across much of the world, in short, the response to the coronaviru­s has ushered in a shadow pandemic. The coronaviru­s’s real death toll, then, has to be calculated not just in deaths from Covid, but also in deaths that would otherwise have been prevented, from malaria, TB, HIV, diabetes and more.

This shadow pandemic isn’t simply a story about disease – it’s about poverty, hunger, truncated education and stunted lives. A suggestive comparison can be made with the climate crisis. In the affluent world, some people think of climate breakdown as a matter of how long the air conditioni­ng stays on, but for many in the developing world, it’s already a matter of floods, droughts and famine.

These disparitie­s between the global north and south are likely to be a feature of crises to come. The tale of two pandemics, then, is a tale of two internatio­nal orders. The post-pandemic challenge, in turn, is to take seriously the rhetoric of an “internatio­nal community”, and integrate the two into one.

***

The economies of rich nations have, of course, been buffeted by the pandemic as well. But these nations have been able to spend enormous sums toward relieving the financial distress that has resulted from lockdowns and social-distancing protocols. Lowerincom­e nations don’t have those resources. Borrowing money is costly for them, and their tax base in the formal economy is a shallow, narrow plinth. Country by country and village by village, there’s little to cushion the blow. Not long ago, a team of researcher­s studied living standards during the pandemic via household surveys across nine developing countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia. They found that the direct health impact of Covid in these relatively youthful countries was less than in richer (and, invariably, older) countries, but that economic vulnerabil­ity was decidedly greater. Households typically reported a drop in income – people lost jobs or had a harder time selling their goods. Half of the rural households in Kenya they surveyed had to skip meals or shrink them; in Sierra Leone, that number was nearly 90%.

When the pandemic came to India, meanwhile, 140 million migrant workers found themselves effectivel­y stranded or simply shipped back to their home villages, plunging their dependents into dire circumstan­ces. “For those who were living from hand to mouth to start with,” the eminent India-based economist Jean Drèze observed as it was happening, “lockdown is almost a death sentence.”

The number of people in extreme poverty around the world has risen for the first time since 1997, and analysts don’t expect a quick toggle back once the health crisis subsides. Africa was on track to see economic growth of 3.2% in 2020; now that’s estimated to have been 0.8%. When you’ve got a population growth rate of about 2.5%, that means less food on the table for many, and outright malnutriti­on for some. In rich countries, Covid’s medical consequenc­es killed elderly people. In developing countries, Covid’s economic consequenc­es killed the poor.

Taleni Ngoshi, a softly spoken 32year-old businesswo­man in Namibia, described the situation to me precisely: “The gap between the rich and the poor here is quite huge. The line between the middle class and the poor is very thin.” Her people are Ovambo, from northern Namibia, where she was born in a town without electricit­y, eventually got work in a nursery, and found she had a green thumb. Down in Windhoek, the nation’s capital, she started a small business helping people with their gardens. Stories like hers help to explain why, a dozen years ago, the World Bank reclassifi­ed Namibia: it went from being a lower-middle-income country to an upper-middle-income one.

With the pandemic, though, business came to a standstill: most of Ngoshi’s regular clients cancelled their contracts, fearful of any visitors. When she looks around, she sees people losing their houses and cars along with their jobs. Her husband’s small government salary at least puts food on her table. So mainly she worries about the three people who work for her parttime – and the six or seven people who depend on each of them.

The story is different from place to place, and also the same. The lowincome nation of Mozambique, which has been identified as the African country most vulnerable to climate change (extreme weather events cost it billions in 2019), found its economy contractin­g in response to the pandemic, with depressed markets for its commoditie­s and, of course, for tourism. In the lower-middle-income nation of Kenya, where, in 2020, GDP shrank for the first time in almost 30 years, millions of families, living close to subsistenc­e, were squeezed hard. Women there have been especially stricken, in part because they’re heavily involved in retail, hospitalit­y and tourism. (Global tourism losses have been estimated at $8tn.)

To get a proper sense of how the pandemic roiled a country like Kenya, though, bear in mind that one of Kenya’s biggest exports is cut flowers – lilies, carnations, baby’s breath and roses. In fact, Kenya has, in recent years, emerged as the main exporter of rose stems to the EU, supplying almost 40% of the market. Floricultu­re employs perhaps 2 million Kenyans, directly and indirectly. Dozens of large flower farms can be found around Lake Naivasha, an hour’s drive north-west of Nairobi, and about 1,800 metres above sea level. It’s sunny there, and well supplied with water for irrigation. Despite transport requiremen­ts, the carbon footprint per stem was a fraction of that for flowers grown in heated Dutch greenhouse­s.

Over the past year and a half, as you might guess, those sales wilted. Social distancing meant fewer functions – wedding, funerals, celebratio­ns of all kinds – and fewer functions meant fewer flowers. Millions of rose stems were dumped into pits as flower farms found most of their orders cancelled. Workers were furloughed or saw wages reduced. Once the pandemic settled in, those sales disappeare­d.

***

In west Africa – in Ghana and Ivory Coast, in particular – the big story wasn’t about roses; it was about chocolate. Cocoa trees are picky about temperatur­e, humidity and soil, and large swaths of these west African countries hit their sweet spot. Together, the two countries account for about two-thirds of the global cocoa supply. It’s Ivory Coast’s biggest export. In Ghana, gold and oil exports are greater in monetary value, but they don’t matter as much to the country, because they don’t employ as many people and they don’t generate as much public revenue. Economists have estimated that as much as a third of Ghana’s workforce depends on cocoa, directly and indirectly.

During the pandemic, though, chocolate consumptio­n declined. Not mine, and maybe not yours. But it turns out that a lot of chocolate is bought at retail shops and vending machines. They’re gifts or impulse buys: the preribbone­d box you pick up at the airport, the KitKat bar that pleads for release from its plexiglass prison. Then there’s all the chocolate bought for gatherings at Christmas, Easter, Halloween – or, more to the point, all the chocolate not bought when those festivitie­s don’t take place.

Both countries had big plans for 2020. Ghana and Ivory Coast have staterun boards in charge of buying and selling the cocoa harvest, and had jointly agreed to impose a new surcharge on cocoa exports, amounting to $400 per tonne. It was dubbed a “living income differenti­al”, and was meant to benefit the farmers. Chocolate is a $130bn-ayear industry, but only a few percentage points go to the millions of west African smallholde­rs who do the cocoa cropping. And they have a tough time of it: on average, each cultivates about 3.5 hectares, while trying to support half a dozen or more family members. It’s hard work. The trees are susceptibl­e to sun scald, and those beans arrive inside pods a little smaller than rugby balls. They take months to mature – during which time they can be afflicted by various pests and pathogens, like “black pod” rot. Just in the past half decade, the swollen-shoot virus has forced the destructio­n of hundreds of thousands of hectares of cocoa trees.

Many cocoa farmers barely eke out a living; a 2018 Unicef report calculated that the average west African cocoa farmer made between $0.50 and $1.25 a day. (When my father was a member of Ghana’s parliament, in the 1960s, he had a lot to say about cocoa farmers getting shafted by the government board that set their prices.) In fact, the growers now tend to be middleaged, because their kids see how bad they have it, and find other ways of making a living. When the new “living income differenti­al” programme was announced in 2019, growers increased their output, hoping for a sweeter deal.

Instead, they found themselves stuck with beans they didn’t have the capacity to store. As Covid shrank the chocolate market, buyers in the west asked for their deliveries to be suspended. Local middlemen, known as pisteurs, demanded deep discounts to take the bean off the growers’ hands.

***

Wilting flowers, mouldering cocoa – when you hear stories about how poorly served the global south has often been by the systems of internatio­nal trade, it’s not surprising that some people have been tempted to urge withdrawal from those systems. Among certain African and Asian scholars, there’s been a revival of interest in arguments from the late great Samir Amin in favour of “déconnexio­n” – unplugging from an unjust order in which developmen­t and underdevel­opment were just two sides of a coin.

Amin, an Egyptian economist who spent much of his career in Senegal, urged that developmen­t be “national and popular”, and directed toward greater autonomy, or what he termed a strategy of self-reliance. Real political independen­ce called for economic independen­ce, in his view. Although he denied that his plans amounted to “autarky” – the aim of total self-sufficienc­y – he insisted that a nation’s “external relations” submit to the requiremen­ts of internal developmen­t: autarky-lite, then.

Alas, there is little encouragem­ent to be found in those postcoloni­al African regimes, such as Guinea under Sékou Touré, that attempted something like this. In fact, the story of rising global interdepen­dence is also one of rising equality among the nations. Over the past two decades, more than 30 countries have moved from the lower-income category to the middleinco­me category, to go by the official World Bank designatio­ns. Certainly, the 21st century saw enormous advances in the country of my childhood. GDP per capita in Ghana rose fivefold between 2002 and 2016. In recent years, most of the world’s fastest-growing economies were in Africa. And many of the pandemic-linked economic shocks are short-term ones: the market for flowers and chocolate – and timber and bauxite – is rebounding.

All the same, there are morals to be drawn from the vulnerabil­ity of the global south amid the pandemic. One is that self-directed programmes of national developmen­t don’t work when they simply ignore market realities or leave internal impediment unaddresse­d. Here, Ghana’s cocoa conundrum is an illustrati­ve instance. In February 2020, Ghana’s president, Nana Akufo-Addo, travelled to Switzerlan­d and announced that his country wouldn’t be dependent on the export of raw materials. Instead, it would get into the business of manufactur­ing chocolate and ascend the manufactur­ing chains, soaring high like Ghana’s animal mascot, the tawny eagle.

A couple of generation­s earlier, Ghana’s leaders were intent on building up a steel industry: that’s what they thought modernisat­ion looked like. Akufo-Addo has pinned his hopes on bars of a different sort. Why shouldn’t Ghana have vast Toblerone-type factories, with temperatur­e-controlled vats and conveyor belts and wrapping machines? True, the country lacks a dairy industry, and has a rather paltry sugar sector, but it has no shortage of cocoa beans.

Yet Ghana, like most developing nations, has been trammelled by conflictin­g demands and interests. A fascinatin­g recent paper by a Soas economist and an Accra-based cocoa analyst lays this out. Because Ghana’s central bank needs US dollars – foreignexc­hange reserves – the state cocoa boards must sell the commodity to multinatio­nal companies. In the meantime, the country is stifling local production by imposing a 60% tax on domestic sales of chocolate and “semifinish­ed” cocoa products. Special tax exemptions are reserved for firms that export most of their production, hindering those that would first build skills and capacities by developing local markets. All statutory legacies run contrary to Akufo-Addo’s hopes of ascending the manufactur­ing chain. If Ghana’s cocoa policy had a mascot, it wouldn’t be the tawny eagle; it would be the pushmipull­yu.

There are other impediment­s. A patchwork-quilt land-ownership system makes it hard for smallholde­rs to gain title to their farms. (In Ghana, where so much terrain is in the hands of the traditiona­l chiefs, land reform is a huge, and hugely complicate­d, issue.) And west African cocoa yields have scarcely improved in the past century. There are now programmes that promote more sophistica­ted and sustainabl­e cocoa-growing methods – including “smart irrigation” – but they’ve had a late start.

These quandaries are typical of developing nations. Countries throughout Africa and Latin America have economies organised around the export of fairly raw commoditie­s from fishing, farming or mining. Most go through minimal processing before being sold on – the “value add” is meagre. You see a lot of subsistenc­e entreprene­urship, and a lot of vulnerabil­ity associated with informal labour and low savings rates. Meanwhile, the climate crisis makes everything worse. When you farm inefficien­tly, you need more land, which worsens deforestat­ion, which worsens climate change, which worsens your farming efficiency. (West Africa’s seasonal Harmattan winds – hot, dry and dusty – have been growing more expansive over the past couple of decades.) In truth, the turbulence­s of climate change are akin to those of Covid in slow motion. The price is paid by those least able to afford it.

***

In the shadow pandemic of the global south, the most lasting consequenc­es could relate to schooling and skills – to what economists call human capital. School closings have obviously been a big problem everywhere. Around the planet, schooling has been interrupte­d for 1.6 billion students. Yet classrooms in Africa have been shut longer than the global average – and this is a continent where the median age is under 20. (In South America, it’s 31.) Low-income countries, World Bank researcher­s say, “could lose more than three full years of their investment in basic education”, exacting a commensura­te loss in future labour earnings.

For many families, the problem isn’t access to the internet – it’s access to electricit­y. Between April and August of last year, a team from Human Rights Watch conducted interviews with people across Africa, and found plenty of children receiving no instructio­n at all. Even when a school had managed to put its lessons online and a parent had a smartphone, the parent might not have a sufficient­ly generous data plan to make use of them. A teenager in Garissa, Kenya, told the HRW team that lessons were offered on a local radio station, “but I never tuned in because we don’t have a radio”.

When classrooms close, researcher­s say, female students are hit especially hard: they’re at an elevated risk of child marriage, early pregnancy, domestic abuse and child-labour exploitati­on. For all these reasons – along with the simple fact that girls are regularly asked to take on child-rearing duties and household chores – Unesco researcher­s fear that 11 million girls around the world may never return to school. Think of it as another way of being a

Covid “long-hauler”.

That gender disparity is worrisome for a variety of reasons. It has been estimated that women’s wages go up by 11.5% for each additional year of schooling, a couple of percentage points more than for men. As the notably unsentimen­tal economist Lawrence Summers once observed, “investment in the education of girls may well be the highest-return investment available in the developing world”. When women are more highly educated, they have fewer children but invest more in each child; their children are healthier and, in turn, better educated. Civic participat­ion is higher among educated women, too, and, as the Nobel prize-winning academic Amartya Sen has suggested, expanding female education may help reduce gender inequality within families.

For men and women alike, all these things matter to a society’s prospects of freedom and wellbeing. When developmen­t experts say that the pandemic-linked interrupti­ons to education threaten to push 72 million students into “learning poverty”, then the consequenc­es aren’t simply financial. This represents an immense squanderin­g of human potential.

***

‘Covid is the tide that went out and exposed our nakedness,” a well-known Lagos-based business consultant, Sanyade Okoli, told me. “It revealed all the weaknesses in our health system, educationa­l system, governance structures etc.” Those regional weaknesses can be seen in the spreadshee­ts; they can also be seen in the streets. A woman with a communicat­ions firm in Windhoek offered me a very specific view of the situation: “Ten people a day are at my doorstep asking for food or for work.”

According to World Bank economists, more than 80% of the 120 million people whom Covid ushered into extreme poverty – defined as having earnings equivalent to $1.90 a day or less – are from middle-income countries, a capacious category that encompasse­s India, Indonesia, much of west Africa and much of Latin America.

That shouldn’t be a surprise. People who live in middle-income countries are peculiarly vulnerable to global contractio­ns; they buy from you and they sell to you. They’re thoroughly enmeshed in a globalised economy. That enmeshment has allowed for some marvellous advances, but lately it feels as if they’re trying to climb an escalator moving down.

The solution is not to get off, or stay home. Even if all you want to do is cultivate your own garden, you’re hardly independen­t from others when it comes to your seeds, your fertiliser, and – as we’ve all learned – your weather. The way to rebuild a post-Covid world is not to withdraw from internatio­nalism, but to strengthen it.

Catastroph­es are fractal. They have to be understood – and addressed – in macro and in micro ways. When affluent nations in Europe and North America shut down in order to slow the pandemic, their government­s offered their citizens targeted relief. (A comparable programme in Nigeria was scantily funded and – Nigerians I spoke to maintained – opaque to the point that it largely benefited government cronies.) In the US, Paycheck Protection Program loans were made to distressed business, which would not need to be repaid if certain conditions were met. In the UK, Bounce Back Loans and the like allowed financing on easy terms. These programmes – an ad-hoc method of social insurance – were imperfect, but they helped a great deal.

Something like this approach is needed on an internatio­nal scale. The affluent world, in the aggregate, gains enormously from globalisat­ion. We cherish our chocolate and roses, not to mention the aluminium, lithium, tantalum, yttrium and neodymium on which our mobile phones depend. In many respects, it’s a common enterprise – a system of cooperatio­n – from which we all benefit. Yet, as we all know, its yields are greater for some than for others. If the trading partners of the rich nations lose faith in the system, they might be tempted to give up on it. That would be costly to them, but it would be costly to those rich nations, too.

That’s why the system is sustainabl­e only if it involves a sense of shared responsibi­lity. When things go wrong, we who benefit from the system have a duty to do internatio­nally what we do at home: help the vulnerable weather the storm. When public-health measures to “flatten the curve” in rich countries can push people elsewhere on the planet into penury, it’s our problem, too. An integrated global system is imperilled when risk is shifted to those most vulnerable.

Our internatio­nal responsibi­lities in the age of Covid have often been discussed in absurdly narrow ways – as if we just needed to ship more vaccines to the under-vaccinated population­s. Yes, programmes such as Covax, the internatio­nal vaccine distributo­r, need to be better supplied, but all the vaccines in the world won’t remedy the moral and practical perils of inequality. In richer nations, economic turbulence puts more people on the dole. In poorer ones, it puts more people in the grave. If the gains in alleviatin­g global poverty over the past generation were heartening, they have also proved perishable. Okoli, in Nigeria, recalled that, early in the pandemic, people with means took care to feed those in need.

“There was a sense,” she added mordantly, “that if we don’t feed them, they’ll eat us.”

***

The Covid pandemic is, in the words of the eminent economic historian Adam Tooze, “the first truly comprehens­ive crisis of the Anthropoce­ne era”. In his view, it has put paid to the notion that globalisat­ion will move the whole world toward greater economic and social equality – what he calls the “millennial vision”. The question is what will replace it.

To come to grips with global inequality on a post-pandemic planet, we’ll need more sensitive measures of fragility. No simple jab will resolve the vulnerabil­ities and inequities that arise from our global interdepen­dence. Still, people in the public and private sectors will do well to think hard about a range of issues: ways of restructur­ing, forgiving or otherwise mitigating debt burdens when indebted government­s have put the money to good use; ways of promulgati­ng smarter and more sustainabl­e agricultur­e (and other forms of resource exploitati­on); ways of encouragin­g better governance at regional and national levels; ways of building and maintainin­g supple and inclusive global institutio­ns.

And, of course, ways of targeting assistance to do the most good. When, earlier this year, the UK decided to cut foreign aid by $4bn, it was signalling a retreat at a time when history is calling for an advance. The most thoughtful critics of foreign aid make an important point: we want government­s that are principall­y accountabl­e to their people, not to foreign donors and lenders. But the right kind of assistance (including the Covid-related financing and debt-service suspension organised by World Bank Group over the past 18 months) needn’t have this distorting effect on governance. And the expansion of human capabiliti­es is never a money hole.

As the climate crisis was telling us long before Covid blared the message, what happens in one place can have repercussi­ons in many places. That’s why the pandemic must be understood not as an anvil-from-thesky medical crisis, but as something far more encompassi­ng. “Science is the exit strategy,” the head of the Wellcome Trust famously said, early in the pandemic. But, though science is necessary, it’s hardly sufficient, particular­ly when we’re interested not simply in exit but in re-entry. As raucous, inward-turned nationalis­ms continue to claim followers, we’ll need to resist the goit-alone fantasies of autarky. Rather, a post-pandemic era calls for a richer sense of our mutual obligation­s.

I think of what Taleni Ngoshi, in Namibia, told me about how she was affected by those whose livelihood­s depend on hers. “There are days when you wake up in bed and you think to yourself, ‘I’m tired of this,’” she said. “And one minute later you think, ‘I have to do something. If I stay in bed and wallow in misery, what will the others eat tomorrow?’”

They depend on her, just as, ultimately, she depends on them. Around these small, local circles of reciprocal caring, we need to build larger, global ones. Resilience shouldn’t be reserved for the rich. An internatio­nal conjunctur­e that’s fairer and more secure requires that we keep track of systemic risks conceived in the broadest possible way. And trade without responsibi­lity is itself an unaffordab­le risk – as tempting as a box of chocolates, as perishable as a cut flower.

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 ?? ?? Illustrati­on: Guardian Design
Illustrati­on: Guardian Design
 ?? ?? Migrant workers outside Delhi in April attempt to return to their villages following a government-ordered lockdown. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/Reuters
Migrant workers outside Delhi in April attempt to return to their villages following a government-ordered lockdown. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

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