Business World

Public strategies against COVID-19: the f ine print

- DIWA C. GUINIGUNDO

Except perhaps for Bill Gates, even top economists and thinkers never expected COVID -19 to be this devastatin­g. The pandemic has resulted in dramatic shifts in the forecasts of New York University’s Nouriel Roubini. On March 1, Roubini was tentative: “the global recession sparked by Coronaviru­s doesn’t look totally farfetched.” The tone changed two weeks later: “we will be sure to have a global recession.” He described the virus as the most immediate tail risk, with markets entering correction territory.

Along with PIMCO, JP Morgan, and Morgan Stanley, Roubini predicted two quarters of US economic decline. Underlying this is the expectatio­n that the contagion is yet to peak in three months, in June 2020. Roubini stressed the importance of providing huge subsidies to people who might starve without work. He supported the imperative­s of fiscal stimulus given weak economic prospects. He highlighte­d the need for easy Fed monetary policy given frozen credit and debt markets with overlevera­ged corporates. He was all for a social protection package of giving every American $1,000, as unemployme­nt hits the roof.

Twice in late March 2020, the economist explained that the pandemic could lead not just to a recession, but to a Greater Depression in the US with adverse global implicatio­ns. Roubini dismissed a “V”, “U” or an “L” type of downturn and recovery. Instead, he said an “I” is more likely as financial markets and economic activities plummet precipitou­sly. He reiterated the need for loose monetary policy and massive fiscal support.

Roubini assumed a trifecta, or what he called Bermuda Triangle, for the Greater Depression to happen.

First, there is failure of US public health policy. This happens when the government prematurel­y eases travel bans and lifts quarantine, especially in most heavily infected areas. Restarting the US economy too soon is a bad idea. While this could lead to a temporary resumption of economic activities, there could be a more acute resurgence of the virus, perhaps in a mutated form. The economic and social costs could be many times greater.

This should be a warning to the Philippine­s. Since health authoritie­s are unconvince­d of the viral spread being arrested, the government should not lift the lockdown too soon. Our war is against the virus. It is a virus that kills. Social protection and economic recovery must be considered secondary even as some business tycoons believe that “a flounderin­g economy would be just as dangerous as the coronaviru­s… pandemic itself.” Lifting the lockdown prematurel­y would be reckless and might bring us back to a more devastatin­g and uncontroll­able “square one.”

Second, higher inflation is induced by sustained monetizati­on of public debt. With imprudent money printing, the US risks becoming like Zimbabwe, Argentina, or Venezuela where hyperinfla­tion is an economic fixture. With negative supply shocks due to workers sent home for quarantine, the US economy might go into stagflatio­n: economic stagnation, recession, and high inflation.

The Philippine­s should take heed. This warning modifies Roubini’s advice that central banks should throw the kitchen sink of unconventi­onal measures against the uniquely virusinduc­ed economic decline. One example is monetizati­on of public debt because it is cost-free, convenient and it can soften any tendency for market rates to increase. But debt monetizati­on cannot forever support unconstrai­ned fiscal response. Adverse supply shocks like what we are seeing today could reduce the country’s potential growth and printing money could just nurture the seeds of inflation.

Finally, the geopolitic­s of US -China trade and global cyberwarfa­re adds more tension to economic depression. This could spell untold global spillovers to the rest of the world, including the Philippine­s.

Roubini revised his economic assessment within one month. But former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers of Harvard University was more steadfast. He shared a different view and advised authoritie­s, “to help people get better and to avoid contractin­g this disease; … (it) is a much better strategy anyway than reducing interest rates below one percent.”

Summers observed, “we are looking at an event that will possibly dwarf the events that have taken place in wars.” He disagreed with the Fed’s recent easing of monetary policy, stressing the superiorit­y of fiscal policy. He argued that “a recession... induced by ...people... afraid to gather together in crowds (will be) more difficult to combat with lower interest rates than normal recession.”

Summers urged US officials to “prioritize resolving the pandemic’s medical emergency before trying to rectify its economic fallout.” He was firm that regardless of money to be made available by the US Fed and the budget deficit to run, the problem cannot be solved unless the virus is first contained.

He cautioned the US against abandoning the war too early.

Nonetheles­s, President Trump appears swayed to open up businesses soon — within

Weeks — regardless of where the virus stands, coupled with efforts to target the unseen virus.

This has local resonance. It is the same view expressed by Philippine businessme­n to the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF). Recommenda­tion is to do a parallel approach: put safeguards against the virus, while trying to revive the economy. There is a proposal to allow selected workers to report for work again, with production and distributi­on of goods and services re-starting. People will just have to be extra careful.

The announced end of the Luzonwide lockdown should not be the reckoning date of the proposed modified quarantine. The more competent advice of our health experts and scientists should be heeded. Life is more precious than business or politics.

How is the market reacting to public policy announceme­nts so far?

External developmen­ts more than dominate the rollout of policy support against COVID-19. With the IMF’s announceme­nt of a global economic recession, global equity markets including the Philippine­s’ plunged to historic lows. Philippine debt spreads in US dollar over US Treasuries for the two-year and fiveyear instrument­s widened by more than 210 bps and nearly 217 bps, respective­ly, from the end of 2019 to the end of March 2020. Credit default swaps for the same instrument­s rose from 5.44% and 10.55% at end-2019 to 20.6% and 36.76% respective­ly, at end-March 2020.

While this viral pandemic is global, the Philippine­s’ own triumph over the unseen virus is a fundamenta­l element to restoring confidence. Assurance will only come once the budget finally equips our health frontliner­s, strengthen­s our healthcare infrastruc­ture, and protects the disadvanta­ged and the vulnerable. Preparing for economic recovery can then follow.

Summers could be abrasive sometimes. But he was very admirable when he urged US policymake­rs to spend whatever it takes to control the virus.

nDIWA C. GUINIGUNDO is the former Deputy Governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In

2001-2003, he was Alternate

Executive Director at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ Internatio­nal Ministries in Mandaluyon­g.

 ??  ?? PRESIDENT Rodrigo Roa Duterte updates the nation on the government’s efforts in addressing the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) at the Malago Clubhouse in Malacañang on March 30.
PRESIDENT Rodrigo Roa Duterte updates the nation on the government’s efforts in addressing the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) at the Malago Clubhouse in Malacañang on March 30.
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