The novel coronavirus COVID-19 outbreak could cost the global economy up to $1 trillion this year, according to a recent report released by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), which cautioned that shock from the epidemic will cause a recession in some countries and depress global annual growth to below 2.5 per cent.
A preliminary downside scenario foresees a $2 trillion shortfall in global income with a $220 billion hit to developing countries (excluding China). The worst affected economies in this scenario will be oil-exporting countries, but also other commodity exporters, which stand to lose more than one percentage point of growth, as well as those with strong trade linkages to the initially shocked economies.
Growth decelerations between 0.7 per cent and 0.9 per cent are likely to occur in countries like Canada, Mexico and the Central American region, in the Americas; countries deeply inserted in the global value chains of East and South Asia, and countries in the immediacy of the European Union.
“We envisage a slowdown in the global economy to under two per cent for this year, and that will probably cost in the order of $1 trillion, compared with what people were forecasting back in September,” Richard Kozul-Wright, director UNCTAD’s division on globalisation and development, said in a press release.
UNCTAD had said last week that the trade impact of the COVID-19 epidemic for India is estimated to be about $348 million and the country figures among the top 15 economies most affected as slowdown of manufacturing in China disrupts world trade. Slowdown of manufacturing in China due to the coronavirus outbreak is disrupting world trade and could result in a $50 billion decrease in exports across global value chains.
Launching the UNCTAD report as world financial markets tumbled over concerns about supply-chain interruptions from China, and oil price uncertainty among major producers, Kozul-Wright warned that few countries were likely to be left unscathed by the outbreak’s financial ramifications.
One ‘Doomsday scenario’ in which the world economy grew at only 0.5 per cent, would involve ‘a $2 trillion hit” to gross domestic product (GDP), he said, adding that collapsing oil prices had been ‘a contributing factor to that growing sense of unease and panic’.
While it was difficult to predict how the international financial markets will react to COVID-19’s impacts, “what they do suggest is a world that is extremely anxious,” he said.
“There’s a degree of anxiety now that’s well beyond the health scares which are very serious and concerning.”
“Governments need to spend at this point in time to prevent the kind of meltdown that could be even more damaging than the one that is likely to take place over the course of the year,” Kozul-Wright said.
UNCTAD’s analysis points out that a persistent belief in the soundness of economic fundamentals and a self-correcting world economy continues to hamper policy thinking in the advanced economies.
“This will stymie the bolder policy interventions needed to prevent the threat of a more serious crisis and increases the chances that recurrent shocks will cause serious economic damage in the future,” Kozul-Wright added.