theguardian.com 
<https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/jun/24/global-economy-will-take-12tn-hit-from-coronavirus-says-imf>
  


Global economy will take $12tn hit from coronavirus, says IMF


Larry Elliott

7-9 minutes

  _____  

The International Monetary Fund has said the global economy will take a $12tn 
(£9.6tn) hit from the Covid-19 pandemic after slashing its already gloomy 
growth projections for the UK and other developed countries in 2020.

The IMF said it would take two years for world output to return to levels at 
the end of 2019 and warned that governments should be cautious about removing 
financial support to their fragile economies.

In an update to forecasts published in April, the Washington-based IMF said it 
now expected the global economy to contract by 4.9% this year, compared with a 
3% drop expected in the spring. 
<https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/apr/14/great-lockdown-coronavirus-to-rival-great-depression-with-3-hit-to-global-economy-says-imf>
 

“The Covid-19 pandemic pushed economies into a Great Lockdown, which helped 
contain the virus and save lives but also triggered the worst recession since 
the Great Depression,” said the IMF’s economic counsellor, Gita Gopinath. She 
added that there would be a fall in living standards for 95% of countries this 
year.

The revised World Economic Outlook said the lockdown had dealt a “catastrophic 
hit” to the global labour market, adding that rising share prices were out of 
kilter with the deepest recession of the postwar era.

Every one of the G7 industrial nations and the leading developing nations has 
had its growth projection revised down, in what the IMF described as a “crisis 
like no other”.

The near-5% drop in global output this year will be much deeper than the drop 
of 0.1% recorded in 2009, after the near meltdown of the global banking system 
the previous autumn. The IMF had already envisaged 2020 as the worst year for 
global growth since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The UK economy was on course to shrink by 10.2% in 2020, the Fund said. In 
April, using data collected before the severity of Britain’s lockdown was 
known, the IMF had thought the UK would contract by 6.5% this year. France 
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/france>  and Italy are also expected to 
register double-digit falls in activity of 12.5% and 12.8% respectively.

The IMF said the coronavirus pandemic had been more negative for activity in 
the first half of 2020 than anticipated and recovery was also projected to be 
slower. Global growth is forecast to be 5.4% in 2021, down from 5.8%.

It said the forecasts were subject to an even greater than usual amount of 
uncertainty and were based on some key assumptions about the fallout from the 
pandemic: physical distancing persisting into the second half of 2020, 
long-term scarring from the larger than anticipated damage caused by the 
lockdown and a hit to productivity as surviving businesses ramped up workplace 
safety and hygiene practices.

The IMF said it was also assuming that financial conditions, which have eased 
since the spring, remained broadly at current levels. “Alternative outcomes to 
those in the baseline are clearly possible, and not just because of how the 
pandemic is evolving. The extent of the recent rebound in financial market 
sentiment appears disconnected from shifts in underlying economic prospects, 
raising the possibility that financial conditions may tighten more than assumed 
in the baseline.”

The IMF advised all countries – including those that had seemingly passed 
infection peaks – to ensure their healthcare systems were adequately resourced 
and called on developed countries to ensure that poorer nations had access to 
adequate, affordable doses of vaccines when they became available.

“Where lockdowns are required, economic policy should continue to cushion 
household income losses with sizeable, well-targeted measures as well as 
provide support to firms suffering the consequences of mandated restrictions on 
activity. Where economies are reopening, targeted support should be gradually 
unwound as the recovery gets under way and policies should provide stimulus to 
lift demand and ease and incentivise the reallocation of resources away from 
sectors likely to emerge persistently smaller after the pandemic.”

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The IMF said strong multilateral cooperation remained vital to mitigate the 
impact of the pandemic  
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/coronavirus-outbreak> on the world’s poor. 
Progress made in reducing extreme poverty since 1990 was at risk.

“Beyond the pandemic, policymakers must cooperate to resolve trade and 
technology tensions that endanger an eventual recovery from the Covid-19 
crisis”, the fund said.

Noting the record drop in greenhouse gas emissions 
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/may/19/lockdowns-trigger-dramatic-fall-global-carbon-emissions>
  during the pandemic, the IMF said policymakers should implement their climate 
change mitigation commitments and work together to scale up equitably designed 
carbon taxation or equivalent schemes.

 

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