Against war and other shocks, pandemic fades from world economic agenda
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[October 12, 2022]
By Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The dozens of items
on the public agenda of the annual meetings of the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund this week include several sessions on
climate change, food security, and other chronic world problems, some on
inflation and trade, and attention as well to economic inclusion and
digital currencies.
Comparatively absent: The coronavirus pandemic, a once-in-a-century
crisis that has killed an estimated 6.5 million people since late 2019
and highlighted broad weaknesses in how the global economy is organized,
will be directly addressed through a single panel on preparedness, and
two others on issues related to the economic recovery.
With the world fractured by war, commodity price shocks, possible
recession, financial market stress, and a slide towards deglobalization,
the lingering health crisis that sparked or accelerated many of those
problems - and kept international institutions meeting virtually until
only recently - has now taken a back seat.
The pandemic "hasn't quite left the scene," IMF Managing Director
Kristalina Georgieva said in remarks last week that set the stage for
this week's meetings. But she said the current priorities for global
economic officials were controlling inflation, improving fiscal policy
after massive spending early in the pandemic, and finding ways to buffer
developing countries against the global rise in interest rates.
"It is totally surprising" that a health event which continues to weigh
on the global economy has fallen down the list of priorities so fast,
said Robin Brooks, managing director and chief economist at the
Institute of International Finance. "The world may be completely
different ... How do we get growth back? How do we build fiscal space
given that we've used up so much" fighting the initial shock of the
pandemic?
'MIRROR WORLD'
The global group of officials meeting this week in Washington will be
gathering in person for the first time since the start of the pandemic,
and they are walking into a cauldron of perhaps half a dozen or more
acute problems - let alone fundamental challenges like climate change.
Russia, a major commodities producer, is in veritable pariah status
because of its invasion of Ukraine; Europe faces the prospect of
recession from risks in part related to the war; China's economy is
faltering under its still-strict zero-COVID policies; a winter energy
crisis is possibly in the offing; liquidity strains have emerged in
financial markets; inflation seems persistent; the response of the U.S.
central bank to rising prices has strained financial markets.
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Protestors and French CGT labour union
workers attend a demonstration as part of a nationwide day of strike
and protests to push for government measures to address inflation,
workers' rights and pension reforms, in Paris, France, September 29,
2022. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
In that context, the pandemic might
seem less pressing. Although cases are rising in Europe again and
there is always the worry of another mutation, the daily deaths
attributed to the coronavirus were averaging just over 1,400 in the
week ending Oct. 9, about a tenth of what was seen at the peak of
the crisis, according to data compiled by the Johns Hopkins
Coronavirus Resource Center.
Yet it remains one of the main factors influencing global economic
outcomes right now, from the ongoing impact of China's strict
policies to stop the spread of the virus to the chronic shock to
labor markets.
Nations like Japan are still wrestling with restrictions, and only
recently lifted limits on foreign travelers, while companies are
struggling to understand how markets, consumers and workers have
changed what they want and what they are willing to pay - or be paid
- for it.
Economists remain in the early stages of understanding how the
events of the last two years have altered the world, and while there
are those discounting the risk of a broad "regime change," some of
the aftershocks from the pandemic are looking more and more
permanent.
In the United Kingdom and United States there are lingering
employment gaps. The job recovery in U.S. sectors like education and
childcare, for example, remains stunted, a fact that may affect how
the rest of the labor force functions given the impact of those
parts of the economy on families.
Studies have begun documenting a potentially permanent blow to labor
supply from the pandemic. One recent analysis concluded that ongoing
infections are keeping about half a million people out of work in
the United States; a recent U.S. Census survey on long COVID illness
estimated 8.5 million people who are in jobs had symptoms that had
lasted at least three months and reduced their ability to carry out
day-to-day activities.
In the United Kingdom, long-term illness has sidelined more than
377,000 people since the start of the pandemic, about 1% of the
labor force.
It may be only the beginning of understanding what the pandemic has
meant and how the world may need to prepare for the next shock.
Combine ongoing labor shortages with supply disruptions and other
new "frictions," said Diane Swonk, KPMG's chief economist, and
what's emerging may be a "mirror world" of what came before, with
"shorter business cycles, more frequent interest rate hikes and
inflation."
"This isn't going away," she said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Leika Kihara
and Mark John; Editing by Paul Simao)
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