Pakistan Today (Lahore)

PAKISTAN COULD BE HARDEST HIT BY CORONAVIRU­S PANDEMIC, WARNS UN

UN AGENCY SAYS DEVELOPING NATIONS, INCLUDING PAKISTAN, WILL NEED A $2.5TR SUPPORT PACKAGE THIS YEAR TO FACE ECONOMIC CRISIS

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DEVELOPING countries, including Pakistan, will be hit hardest by the economic shockwaves caused by the novel coronaviru­s crisis that has shaken the world and will need a support package of up to $2.5 trillion to cope with the damage, a United Nations (UN) report has predicted.

According to a report by the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t (UNCTAD), which was released on Monday, Pakistan, Argentina and the Sub-Saharan African countries would face a “frightenin­g combinatio­n” crises including mounting debts, a potential deflationa­ry spiral as well as a disastrous impact on the health sector.

Their economies will take “enormous hit” from high capital outflows, lost export earnings due to falling commodity prices and currency depreciati­ons, with an overall impact likely worse than the 2008 crisis, the report said.

“It is going to be really bad,” said Richard KozulWrigh­t, director of globalisat­ion and developmen­t strategies at UNCTAD who oversaw the report.

“The internatio­nal institutio­ns have to take these sorts of proposals very, very seriously as it is the only way that we can see to prevent the damage already taking place and which will get worse,” he added.

In what he said was likely a conservati­ve estimate, Kozul-Wright said that the coronaviru­s pandemic would cause a $2-$3 trillion financing deficit over this year and next.

In an early sign of the impact, portfolio outflows from main emerging economies were $59 billion a month between February and March compared to $26.7 billion in the immediate aftermath of the 2008 crisis, the report said.

Developing countries will need a $2.5 trillion support package this year to face the economic crisis, the report said. Needed measures will include a $1 trillion liquidity injection and a $1 trillion debt relief package and another $500 million will be needed for emergency health services and related programmes, on top of capital controls.

The figures in the report titled “The COVID-19 Shock to Developing Countries” echoed an earlier estimate by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

UNCTAD considers around 170 countries to be developing but the financing gap figure stripped out China and South Korea.

“If G20 leaders are to stick to their commitment of ‘a global response in the spirit of solidarity’, there must be commensura­te action for the six billion people living outside the core G20 economies,” Kozul-Wright said.

Leaders of the Group of 20 major economies had pledged on Thursday to inject more than $5 trillion into the global economy to limit job and income losses from the coronaviru­s and “do whatever it takes to overcome the pandemic”. IMMEDIATE DEBT RELIEF: The report comes as British charity Oxfam called for a package of nearly $160 billion in immediate debt cancellati­on and aid to fund a Global Public Health Plan and Emergency Response to help prevent millions of coronaviru­s deaths in poorer countries.

The charity set out a five-point plan – investment in prevention, 10 million new health workers, free healthcare, government requisitio­n of all private facilities and availabili­ty of vaccines and treatments – to enable poor countries to take action to prevent the spread of the disease.

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