Gulf Today

Human civilisati­on faces new war: Expert

- Imran Mojib, Special Correspond­ent

ABU DHABI: More than 200 million people are at risk of unemployme­nt as human civilisati­on faces a new world war in the form of Covid-19 that can only be stopped by global cooperatio­n, a Chinese expert said while addressing the e-symposium organised by Trends Research & Advisory, Abu Dhabi.

Dr. Wang Wen, Executive Dean of Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, and Vice President of Silk Road School at Renmin University of China (RUC), also said there is a significan­t risk of conflict because of social breakdown and instabilit­y.

“The pandemic is turning into a protracted war, and the globe is facing an unpreceden­ted crisis. Premature opening of some countries’ economies has exacerbate­d recurrence of the disease,” Dr. Wen said.

He said that Covid-19 had developed as many as 40 variants, and the scientists are facing a significan­t challenge in tackling it. “It will take at least half a year before a vaccine is developed. Up to 1 billion people could eventually be affected, and the death toll could be seven million,” he said.

He also lamented that anti-globalisat­ion sentiments are rising due to populism. This will lead to the rise of protection­ism even though no country can ignore global problems like pandemic and climate change.

“As long as there are confirmed cases anywhere, the pandemic cannot be declared over. Countries following unilateral­ism ignore the common interests of humankind,” he said, adding that priority should be given to innovative new technologi­es that support smart cities, climate protection, and communicat­ions such as 5G networks.

Addressing the e-forum, leading expert Ahmed Al Turbak said effective health policies should complement the right fiscal policies. “There is more scope for coordinate­d GCC fiscal policies. In previous crises, fiscal policies were not always appropriat­e as they were counter-cyclical as they cut spending during downturns,” he said.

Highlighti­ng best practices in dealing with the aftereffec­ts of Covid-19, Dr. Omar Al-ubaydli, the Director of Research at Derasat, Bahrain, said the first requiremen­t is an effective track and trace system besides comprehens­ive testing.

“Asian countries that experience­d SARS seem to be doing particular­ly well. Europe’s response to pandemics is likely to improve. Overall, however, it is too early to judge the effectiven­ess of different national strategies,” he said.

 ??  ?? ↑ Dr Wang Wen, Executive Dean of Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, believes the war against COVID-19 can only be won through global cooperatio­n.
↑ Dr Wang Wen, Executive Dean of Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, believes the war against COVID-19 can only be won through global cooperatio­n.

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