The Herald

Recession will be deeper than 2008 crisis

- Graeme Roy Professor Graeme Roy is director of the University of Strathclyd­e’s Fraser of Allander Institute.

WHEN I wrote my last column, the full effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic were only starting to emerge.

It was the day after the UK Budget, and although the Chancellor had warned of a “significan­t economic shock”, there was still hope the impact of Covid-19 would be largely temporary.

This has disappeare­d. We are in a recession, and one that will be deeper than the 2008 financial crisis.

Indeed, there is simply no precedent for this situation. Never before have we sought to effectivel­y shut-down all but essential parts of our economy.

Our own analysis suggests anywhere up to 20 per cent to 25% of Scotland’s economic activity has been mothballed at the current time, with businesses shutdown or working at reduced capacity.

What is also unique about the current crisis is that we know the underlying cause is temporary. We will emerge – hopefully as safely as possible – in a few months’ time from the health crisis. Then we can look to re-build.

Sadly, the scale of the recession is such that even despite the best efforts of the UK and Scottish government­s, businesses will go to the wall and many people will lose their jobs. There will be uncertain and dark days ahead.

Quite rightly, the focus of policymake­rs has been on prioritisi­ng our health through the challengin­g period to come. There is no trade-off. Investing in our public health today is an investment in the future of our economy.

But fairly soon, policymake­rs will turn to the future and what happens next.

Some of this will no doubt focus upon learning lessons from our readiness to the current pandemic. Questions will be asked about our vulnerabil­ity to any major global risk in the future, from cyber-attacks through to environmen­tal disasters.

But there are wider questions too, particular­ly with regard to whether or not our underlying economic model has helped, or hindered, our response. Has our reliance upon global supply chains, coupled with our focus upon services and high-end manufactur­ing rather than core manufactur­ing capacity, constraine­d the ability of domestic industries to contribute to the pandemic response?

Big questions too will be asked around the nature of the “social contract” in the UK, from levels of social security payments through to how we “value” the jobs that people do. The irony that so many of us are now dependent upon workers who – just a few weeks ago – had been classified by some as

“non-essential” should not be lost.

As with any recession, a focus upon protecting the most vulnerable will be key to preventing long-term scarring.

But alongside these structural questions, we will need to turn our attention to the practical issue of rebuilding.

Re-starting our economy, when the time is right, will require careful thought. The nature of the health crisis is such that any return to “normal” will be slow and steady. Planning out how businesses can start-up again, under what conditions, and at what capacity, will take time. Difficult decisions will be required about which sectors and businesses to prioritise. There will be setbacks. All of this should be done as a partnershi­p between business, employees and their trade unions and policymake­rs, with public health advice paramount.

Tens of billions of pounds have been spent supporting the economy through the current crisis. But this is just the start. An unpreceden­ted recovery package to help rebuild businesses and to get people back to work will be needed.

It will be a long road ahead.

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