Developing countries unlock key industries to safeguard
earnings and jobs
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[April 17, 2020] By
Helen Reid and Tanisha Heiberg
(Reuters) - From Africa to Asia and Latin
America, emerging countries disproportionately bruised by the COVID-19
pandemic are allowing some key industries to start back up in a bid to
soften the economic blow.
This tentative unlocking highlights the balancing act for developing
nations as they seek to protect their people while averting an economic
collapse some fear could do more damage than the disease itself.
While academic study of COVID-19 containment policies is in its infancy,
one model by Yale economists argues social distancing measures deliver
far fewer benefits, at much greater economic cost, in poorer countries.
"They're battling competing tensions. It's being framed as lives versus
livelihoods," said Ronak Gopaldas, director of Africa-focused
consultancy Signal Risk.
Unlike wealthier economies, developing countries cannot afford to spend
trillions of dollars protecting people and businesses from the economic
fallout of the pandemic. That has prompted some to start reopening key
sectors.
"What's clear is that lockdowns can't go on forever and they're having
to strike a balance between safety and productivity," said Gopaldas.
South Africa announced on Thursday it will allow mines to operate at 50%
capacity during its lockdown, allowing workers to be called back
gradually.
Mining contributed 360.9 billion rand ($19.74 billion), around 7% of
GDP, to the economy in 2019. Amid mass unemployment, it provides more
than 450,000 jobs.
Getting mines back to full production will take weeks, said Jacques Nel,
of research firm NKC African Economics. But opening them early is
essential.
"Some countries are going to recover quicker than others, so you have to
position yourself as one of the more attractive ones when this blows
over," he said.
SHOCK ABSORBERS
Other governments are making similar calculations, generally favouring
large employers or generators of crucial foreign exchange. JPMorgan
calculates that emerging market FX reserves fell by more than $190
billion in March.
"They won't be able to borrow anymore," said Wayne Camard, an ex-IMF
official in Africa and Latin America who now heads the Camard Group, a
business intelligence consultancy. "Mining and agricultural commodities
are the main foreign exchange earners for a lot of developing
countries."
Investors pulled a record $83.3 billion from emerging market stocks and
bonds in March. At the same time, borrowing costs have soared, making it
effectively impossible for many countries to raise funds on
international capital markets.
Malaysia has allowed its palm oil industry -- the world's second-biggest
-- to operate during a six-week lockdown. Its electronics industry,
which produces nearly 8% of the world's semiconductors, is running on a
third of its normal workforce.
Colombia, the world's fifth-biggest coal exporter, allowed coal producer
Drummond to partially restart on April 9.
Coal is Colombia's second-largest source of foreign exchange, and
royalties paid by coal firms are "fundamental" to coping with the health
emergency and reviving the economy, the energy ministry told Reuters.
[to top of second column] |
Container ships wait to load and offload goods in port during a
21-day nationwide lockdown aimed at limiting the spread of
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Cape Town, South Africa, April 17,
2020. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings
Governments that cannot afford to replace workers' lost incomes are under
pressure to reopen labour-intensive sectors.
Pakistan on Tuesday extended its lockdown by two weeks but said some industries,
starting with construction, would reopen in phases.
"If the construction sector can be stimulated in these testing times, it can
prove to be an important shock absorber," said Sakib Sherani, chief executive of
Islamabad-based economics research firm Macro Economic Insights.
Construction and related sectors account for about 8-10% of Pakistan's GDP, he
estimated, and 10-12% of jobs.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni is keeping open factories, which he called
"the life-blood of the country", provided employees live in on-site
accommodation. Manufacturing employs 10% of the formal workforce.
TARGETED MEASURES
Other countries have implemented targeted quarantines to isolate critical
industries from the pandemic.
Nigeria, Africa's top crude producer, is allowing staff to travel to oilfields
only when essential in a bid to avoid infections that could force a broad
shutdown.
In Chile, where mining constituted 50% of exports last quarter, the government's
preference for targeted, local action has helped keep large mines of Atacama and
Antofagasta open.
The northern desert provinces account for most of Chile's copper and lithium
output but fewer than 2% of its COVID-19 cases as of April 12, health ministry
figures showed.
But in an interconnected world, damage limitation policies can only go so far.
Mexico's president last week said the auto sector, which contributes 3.8% of
GDP, would only reopen when the U.S. industry ramps up again.
Developing countries also have large informal sectors which are harder to
measure and lack financial safety nets.
In Jakarta, Indonesia's capital, COVID-19 restrictions ban motorbike taxis from
carrying passengers, threatening the livelihood of thousands who work for
ride-hailing apps.
"We pleaded for the president's help," said Igun Wicaksono, who heads "Garda
Nasional", an association of 100,000 motorbike taxi drivers.
"Of course we're worried and we're scared. But if we stay at home, we won't have
food."
(Reporting by Tanisha Heiberg, Helen Reid and Joe Bavier in Johannesburg, Gibran
Peshimam in Islamabad, Krishna N. Das in Kuala Lumpur, Elias Biryabarema in
Kampala, David Sherwood and Fabian Cambero in Santiago, Libby George in Lagos,
Noé Torres in Mexico City, Julia Symmes Cobb in Bogota, Maikel Jefriando and
Bernadette Christina Munthe in Jakarta and Karin Strohecker in London; Editing
by Joe Bavier and Catherine Evans)
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