By Mariëtte Le Roux
Paris”•The global economy will contract at least six percent this year, with an unprecedented loss of income and “extraordinary uncertainty” caused by measures to contain the coronavirus outbreak taking a heavy toll, the OECD said Wednesday.
In the event of a second wave of contagion later in the year, economic output could even shrink by as much as 7.6 percent, it warned.
In both scenarios, recovery will be “slow and uncertain.”
GDP growth should resume in 2021, by 5.2 percent if the virus is contained, and 2.8 percent if there is another infection wave, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development said in its latest outlook, entitled “World Economy on a Tightrope.”
It warned that by the end of next year, “the loss of income exceeds that of any previous recession over the last 100 years outside wartime, with dire and long-lasting consequences for people, firms and governments.”
As unemployment rises, private debt levels in some countries are “uncomfortably high,” said the report, “and business failure and bankruptcy risks loom large.”
Back in March”•when the outbreak had hit China but not yet the world’s other large economies”•the OECD had slashed its global growth forecast by half a percentage point to 2.4 percent, which would have already been the worst performance since the 2008 financial crisis.
Things have since gotten much worse, with commerce and travel shut down as governments scrambled to rein in the pandemic by keeping people at home.
Economic activity in the OECD’s 37 developed member countries has collapsed, the report said, by as much as 20 or 30 percent in some cases in what it called “an extraordinary shock.”
In the latest example of trouble, France estimates that 800,000 jobs will be lost in the coming months, or 2.8 per cent of the country’s total employment, finance minister Bruno Le Maire told a parliamentary finance committee on Wednesday.
As long as there is no vaccine or treatment against the coronavirus, physical distancing to prevent contagion, testing people for the virus, and tracing and isolating those infected will remain key to fighting the pandemic.
But sectors affected by border closures and those requiring close personal contact, such as tourism, travel, entertainment, restaurants and accommodation, “will not resume as before,” said the OECD.
“Global cooperation to tackle the virus with a treatment and vaccine and a broader resumption of multilateral dialogue will be key for reducing doubt and unlocking economic momentum,” the OECD said.
Governments and central banks have taken extraordinary steps to protect businesses and employees from the outbreak’s economic fallout.
But this too has consequences, said the report, with gross public debt rising fast.
“Governments can provide the safety nets that allow people and firms to adjust, but cannot uphold private sector activity employment and wages for a prolonged period.”
Agathe Demarais, global forecasting director at The Economist Intelligence Unit, said about the report: “The OECD’s predictions highlight the fact that the global economy will sink into a deep recession this year, from which it will start to emerge only in 2022 at best.”