Hyderabad:As the coronavirus continues to creep across the globe, it has triggered the most severe recession in nearly a century.
In a devastating report, OECD’s latest Economic Outlook said that the COVID-19 pandemic is a global health crisis without precedent in living memory. It has triggered the most severe economic recession in nearly a century and is causing enormous damage to people’s health, jobs and well-being.
As restrictions begin to ease, the path to economic recovery remains highly uncertain and vulnerable to the second wave of infections. Strengthening healthcare systems and supporting people and businesses to help adapt to a post-COVID world will be crucial, it says.
The lockdown measures brought in by most governments have succeeded in slowing the spread of the virus and in reducing the death toll but they have also frozen business activity in many sectors, widened inequality, disrupted education and undermined confidence in the future.
The forecast says that without a second wave, Global economic activity falls 6% in 2020 and OECD unemployment climbs to 9.2% from 5.4% in 2019. Living standards fall less sharply than with a second wave but five years of income growth is lost across the economy by 2021.
If a second outbreak occurs triggering a return to lockdowns, world economic output is forecast to plummet 7.6% this year, before climbing back 2.8% in 2021. At its peak, unemployment in the OECD economies would be more than double the rate prior to the outbreaks, with little recovery in jobs next year.
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The economic impact of strict and relatively lengthy lockdowns in Europe will be particularly harsh. Euro area GDP is expected to plunge by 11½% this year if a second wave breaks out, and by over 9% even if a second hit is avoided, while GDP in the United States will take a hit of 8.5% and 7.3% respectively, and Japan 7.3% and 6%.
Emerging economies such as Brazil, Russia and South Africa, meanwhile, face particular challenges of strained health systems, adding to the difficulties caused by a collapse in commodity prices, and their economies plunging by 9.1%, 10%, and 8.2% respectively in case of a double hit scenario, and 7.4%, 8% and 7.5% in case of a single hit.
China’s and India’s GDPs will be relatively less affected, with a decrease of 3.7% and 7.3% respectively in case of a double hit and 2.6% and 3.7% in case of a single hit.