'Great
Lockdown' to rival Great Depression with 3% hit to global economy,
says IMF
Latest
World Economic Outlook describes shock of coronavirus pandemic as
‘like no other’
26
April, 2020
The
International Monetary Fund has slashed its forecasts for global
growth in response to the Covid-19 pandemic and warned of a slump in
output this year unparalleled since the Great Depression of the
1930s.
In
its half-yearly forecasts, the IMF said the “Great Lockdown”
would cause a dramatic drop in activity that would be far more
painful than the recession that followed the banking meltdown of the
late 2000s.
The
IMF said the sudden shock caused by the spread of the coronavirus
meant it had been forced to tear up an estimate it made just three
months ago of 3.3% global growth this year and replace it with an
expected contraction of 3%.
Until
now the downturn that followed the near meltdown of the global
financial system in late 2008 has been the most serious of the
postwar ear, with global activity shrinking by 0.1% in 2009
Bigger
output losses have now been pencilled in for 2020, concentrated in
the rich economies of the west, which are forecast to shrink by 6.1%
on average. Italy and Spain – the two worst-affected European
economies from Covid-19 so far – will see GDP falls of 9.1% and 8%,
respectively, the IMF said in its world economic outlook. Britain’s
drop in output is put at 6.5%.
Of
the big emerging economies, China’s growth rate is expected to fall
from 6.1% last year to 1.2% in 2020 – its lowest in decades. India
is on course to expand by 1.9%, down from 4.2%.
Adjusted
to take account of population changes, the IMF’s forecasts were
even gloomier. Gross domestic product (GDP) per head – one measure
of living standards – is expected to fall globally by 4.2% in 2020,
by 6.5% in advanced countries, and by 7% in the UK.
Gita
Gopinath, the IMF’s economic counsellor, said the size of the hit
to the global economy, uncertainty about the how long the shock would
last, and the need to discourage economic activity to contain the
virus had to led to a crisis “like no other”.
She
added: “It is very likely that this year the global economy will
experience its worst recession since the Great Depression, surpassing
that seen during the global financial crisis a decade ago. ‘The
Great Lockdown’, as one might call it, is projected to shrink
global growth dramatically.”
The
IMF is predicting a partial recovery in 2021, when it is estimating
that growth will recover to 5.6%, but Gopinath said the level of GDP
would remain below the pre-virus trend, with considerable uncertainty
about the strength of the rebound.
She
warned: “Much worse growth outcomes are possible and maybe even
likely.”
The
IMF’s World Economic Outlook (WEO) is assuming that economic
disruptions are concentrated mostly in the second quarter of 2020 for
almost all countries except China (where the impact was most intense
in the first quarter). The time taken for production to be scaled
back up means the sharp plunge in output will be followed by only a
gradual recovery.
The
IMF said its forecasts were highly uncertain and that the risks were
that the economic cost of the pandemic would be worse than currently
envisaged. Recovery relied on stimulus measures being effective in
preventing widespread company bankruptcies, limiting job losses, and
easing financial strains.
The
WEO modelled three alternative scenarios: a 2020 lockdown lasting 50%
longer than it is forecasting; a mild recurrence of the virus in
2021; and a protracted pandemic and longer containment effort in
2020, as well as a recurrence in 2021.
In
the worst case, the global economy would shrink by around 11% rather
than 3%.
Gopinath
said: “The economic landscape will be altered significantly for the
duration of the crisis and possibly longer, with greater involvement
of government and central banks in the economy.”
At
a time when Italy and Spain have started to lift their lockdown
restrictions, Gopinath said: “There are many reasons for optimism,
despite the dire circumstances. In countries with major outbreaks,
the number of new cases has come down, after strong social distancing
practices were put in place. The unprecedented pace of work on
treatments and vaccines also promises hope. The swift and substantial
economic policy actions taken in many countries will help shield
people and firms, preventing even more severe economic pain and
create the conditions for the recovery.”
Although
the effects of the pandemic have been more severe so far in developed
countries, the IMF said they were better equipped to cope. It added
that many emerging and developing economies faced a multilayered
crisis comprising a health shock, domestic disruptions, plummeting
external demand, capital flight, and collapsing commodity prices.
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