Shanghai Daily

A call to global action to save the world economy

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THE COVID-19 pandemic has so far paralyzed economic activities around the world, and the prospect for a catastroph­ic economic crunch is hovering.

In its mid-April projection, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund braced the world for the “worst recession” since the Great Depression­s of the 1930s. And the Asian Developmen­t Bank estimated recently that the global economy could suffer between US$5.8 trillion and US$8.8 trillion in losses as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Many countries have already rolled out a series of monetary and fiscal interventi­ons, as well as plans to reopen their economies. Yet given the colossal hit on real economies and the highly interrelat­ed global financial system, saving a globalized economy this time requires even stronger global collaborat­ion.

History has shown what happens if global coordinati­on is absent amid economic turmoil.

In the Great Depression of the 1930s, a severe outbreak of protection­ist trade policies worldwide led to a sharp contractio­n in global trade, followed by a decadelong lackluster rebound in trade even when the world economy started to recover.

Fortunatel­y, in the immediate aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, which originated in the United States, major economies resisted calls for inwardlook­ing measures and coordinate­d a global response to reposition the world economy toward recovery and eventual growth.

But the past few years have witnessed setbacks to an open world economy with the incumbent US administra­tion making frequent protection­ist waves, waging tariff offensives against almost all of its major trading partners and seeking to cripple the world’s rules-based multilater­al trading system.

As the current health crisis continues to shatter economies and disrupt global supply chains, some US politician­s have been intensifyi­ng isolationi­st and protection­ist measures like restrictin­g the trade flow of personal protective equipment, further raising tariffs to shore up manufactur­ing capability at home and fiddling with the idea of “decoupling” from China.

They are trading long-term world prosperity for short-term political gains.

Using all available policy tools

The internatio­nal community should be far-sighted and strive for a more cohesive effort to rid the ailing global economy of the pains inflicted by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The first job is for government­s worldwide to coordinate their macroecono­mic policies. At the extraordin­ary Group of 20 leaders’ summit in March, members have pledged to use all available policy tools to minimize the economic and social damage from the pandemic, restore global growth, maintain market stability, protect workers and businesses, and continue to conduct bold and largescale fiscal support. These should be the consensus among the entire global community.

The second commitment should be maintainin­g stable global supply chains. The coronaviru­s pandemic may prompt some businesses to take some actions to ward off future disruption­s, yet it will not rip apart existing global supply chains and reverse the general trend of globalizat­ion.

The third task is for government­s to cut tariffs, remove trade barriers and support the smooth flow of trade.

An increasing­ly interconne­cted world means crises may often go beyond national borders, thus making coordinate­d global responses imperative.

Choosing to fight alone will simply make matters worse.

(Xinhua)

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