The right policies will help developing countries in Asia speed to economic recovery. Photo: Christian Holzinger |
The COVID-19 pandemic caused major contractions in economic activity throughout Asia and the Pacific. Despite some green shoots, in most countries the recovery path is still unclear.
The recently published Asian Development Outlook 2020 Update provides some insights into the projected shape of recovery in developing countries in Asia. The region’s economy is forecast to contract by 0.7% in 2020 and rebound by 6.8% in 2021. The expected expansion next year is fairly consistent with the region’s average growth rate of 7% over the last 20 years, but will not be sufficient to return the economy to its pre-pandemic trend by year-end. As such, the debate on the shape of recovery has important policy implications – in particular, to gauge the size and timing of the appropriate policy responses.
What are the possible paths of recovery? To illustrate, consider an optimistic scenario where the swift arrival of effective vaccines prompts a ‘V-shaped’ recovery. In this situation, the pandemic causes an output loss but GDP quickly returns to its pre-COVID-19 trend of economic activity. An often overlooked but important fact is that, for a V-shaped recovery to occur, growth needs to overshoot its long-run mean for some time.
In a more pessimistic scenario, economic growth does not overshoot, but just returns to its long-term mean. This implies a larger output loss, as the economy follows an L-shaped recovery along a lower path for GDP parallel to its trend before COVID-19.
Other possible recovery trajectories are U-shaped or swoosh-shaped, where it takes several years before the economy converges back to its pre-pandemic trend. Projections in the Asian Development Outlook 2020 Update point to either a swoosh-shaped or L-shaped recovery for the region’s economy, with significant variation in the shape of individual economies’ recoveries.
How should regional authorities react? To devise appropriate policy responses, we need to understand the key demand or supply constraints binding growth. The shape of recovery will depend on whether the negative effects of the demand shock, such as falling consumption and investment, spill over to the supply-side and restrict the economy’s capacity to grow.
Beyond a certain point, depressed demand can damage the drivers of productivity growth. For instance, human capital depreciates as learning-by-doing declines and some workers de-skill due to persistently high unemployment. Research and development investment falls and physical capital accumulation slows down, as investment remains sluggish. In short, a temporary but deep decline in demand can lead to an L-shaped recovery (or worse) by causing persistent damage to the economy, a concept known as hysteresis.
On the other hand, a V-shaped recovery from the pandemic poses policy challenges too. The first relates to the timing for lifting of containment measures put in place to stem the spread of the pandemic. If this is done prematurely, the economy grows faster in the very short run but the risk of a second wave (or a prolonged outbreak) increases, so that the economy may fall into a double-dip recession.
*Company contributor Asian Development Bank
Read the full article at ADB Blog: https://blogs.adb.org/blog/covid-19-how-quickly-can-asia-bounce-back?fbclid=IwAR08_2uwe-4VigiplMsNXtdgb4w7WsddFuoKHGLBn7yp70O0TPlND4qtHmg
Tags: #ADB, #COVID19, #COVID19impact, #economy
Tags: #ADB, #COVID19, #COVID19impact, #economy
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Web: www.mekongtourism.org
Tel: +66 2038 5071-1
Mobile: +66 8555 44234, +66 8098 95853
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