The Manila Times

The world BC (before Covid-19) and AC (after Covid-19): Role of government

- HENRY CHAN

COVID-19 is an epochal event that promises to shake up the historical timeline when we look back on the year 2020. So many aspects of our daily lives changed during the pandemic that characteri­zing life as BC (before Covid-19) and AC (after Covid-19 ) is not an exaggerati­on. While we are still living under the pandemic, there is reasonable optimism that a working vaccine could be widely available by the middle of 2021 even as the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) cautioned the general public on the effectiven­ess of the seven vaccine candidates in the phase three test. We can already be looking at one of the most enduring impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic the increasing role of the government in the AC world.

The past seven months living under the pandemic not only highlighte­d the importance of the government in keeping life moving along during the lockdown, but also exposed the many shortcomin­gs of the current social and economic setup in many countries.

Almost half of the world’s 7.8 billion population underwent some degree of lockdown in the past seven months. Government­s across the globe provided some direct subsidy to make up for the lost wages of the furloughed workers. They also spent billions to subsidize businesses to minimize the layoff of citizens in affected industries. All workers, who could work via computers, were put on work-from-home (WFH) arrangemen­t. All central banks dropped interest rates and flooded the financial market with liquidity to help the economy. Government­s everywhere also rushed to impose quarantine and physical distancing rules to minimize infection-spreading, sending in policemen and the military to enforce new isolation rules in many cases. Education department­s all over the world substitute­d regular schooling with online teaching to keep the 1.4 billion students away from possible infection in schools.

All the draconian steps from virtually every government have seen relative levels of successful­ly containing the social and economic damages. Never in human history during peacetime were government­s playing such a prominent role in the economic and social life of everyone; though one could say we were at war with an invisible enemy.

The leading role of government­s in handling the pandemic will likely continue after the crisis recedes by next year. The measures that we adopted to cut down the pandemic damages have left a host of problems that only government­s can address.

The foremost issue facing many countries is structural unemployme­nt from the unpreceden­ted speed of new technology adoption during the pandemic. The most notable of which is WFH, automation in response to supply chain disruption and home entertainm­ent in place of social gathering. Generally,these changes take years to happen, but their incorporat­ion was compressed within a few months due to various quarantine­s. New technologi­es notably provided the enabling power to most of these changes, and these technologi­es offered significan­t productivi­ty gains down the road if the users adopted a mentality of more production rather than consumptio­n. The transforma­tions also rendered a lot of skill sets of workers obsolete in the new AC paradigm. The workers adjusting to the latest technologi­es can’t be possible without active involvemen­t of government­s.

The second issue is the precarious state of government finances around the world. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) estimated that advanced countries’ debt to gross domestic product ( GDP) ratio would reach more than 100 percent on average at the end of the year as these spent their way to support the economy during the pandemic. This ratio is higher than the debt-toGDP percentage at the end of World War 2. For developing countries, the ratio will reach an unforseen 6U percent by the end of 2020. We should note that very few countries could afford the lockdown after the initial round in April and May.

How each government will keep spending to address infrastruc­ture shortcomin­g exposed by the pandemic when its finances face a slowing economy that is adjusting to new technologi­es will test the governance capability of every country. The rising inequality brought about by the pandemic will likely aggravate the call for a new social contract between the government and its people at a time of resource constraint.

The third issue challengin­g all countries is the heightenin­g geopolitic­al tension brought by Covid-19. Chinese-American rivalry intensifie­d significan­tly during the health and financial crisis as the United States moved to withdraw from WHO and decoupled from the world’s joint efforts at vaccine developmen­t and allocation and from multilater­al approaches to internatio­nal issues, among other political initiative­s that escalated tensions around the world. The narrowing gap of economic output between the two countries has heightened anxieties about

the end of US economic and technologi­cal dominance.

The decoupling between the two economic powers will change the multilater­al economic and geopolitic­al setup in place since the end of World War 2. The new complex global geopolitic­al landscape in the AC world calls for enlightene­d government­s everywhere to work for a new internatio­nal order.

The myriad problems facing all countries in the post-Covid-19 world mean holistic, innovative governance is more important than ever before.

Dr. Henry Chan is an internatio­nally recognized developmen­t economist based in Singapore. He is also a senior visiting research fellow at the Cambodia Institute for Cooperatio­n and Peace and adjunct research fellow at the Integrated Developmen­t Studies Institute( ID SI ). His primary research interest includes global economic developmen­t, A sean-China relations and the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

New Worlds by ID SI( Integrated Developmen­t aims to present frameworks based on a balance of economic theory, historical business and communitie­s and attempt and spirituali­ty. We welcome logical feedback and possibly working together (idsicenter@gmail.com).

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