World News | Effect of Coronavirus Measures to Leave 'lasting Scars' on Global Economy: World Bank

Get latest articles and stories on World at LatestLY. The effects of the measures imposed to fight the novel coronavirus will leave a lasting effect on the world economy, weakening investment, innovation, employment, education, trade, supply chains and consumption, the World Bank said in an analysis on the crisis issued Tuesday.

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Washington DC [USA], June 3 (Sputnik/ANI): The effects of the measures imposed to fight the novel coronavirus will leave a lasting effect on the world economy, weakening investment, innovation, employment, education, trade, supply chains and consumption, the World Bank said in an analysis on the crisis issued Tuesday.

"COVID-19 and the resulting global recession will leave lasting scars. Investment and innovation will be weakened," the World Bank said. "Human capital will be eroded through unemployment and lost education. Trade linkages and supply chains may be permanently unwound. Behavioural patterns, including more cautious services consumption, may persist."

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The World Bank said the listed prospects come on the heels of already challenging conditions in emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs), noting that those economies already had growth projections downgraded repeatedly over the past decade amid steadily declining potential growth.

EMDEs that have weak health systems and those that rely heavily on global trade, tourism, or remittances from abroad as well as those that depend on commodity exports will be particularly hard-hit, the World Bank said.

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In such economies, deep recessions associated with the novel coronavirus pandemic will likely exacerbate the multi-decade slowdown in growth and productivity, the primary drivers of higher living standards and poverty reduction.

"In the average EMDE, over a five-year horizon, a recession combined with a financial crisis could lower potential output by almost 8 per cent, while in the average EMDE energy exporter, a recession combined with an oil price plunge could lower potential output by 11 per cent," the World Bank said. "Past epidemics lowered investment by about 11 per cent and labour productivity by 6 per cent after five years in affected countries and in some instances significantly more."

The World Bank Group President David Malpass said in a note accompanying the analysis that the scope and speed with which the economic shutdowns have devastated the poor around the world are unprecedented in modern times.

"Current estimates show that 60 million people could be pushed into extreme poverty in 2020. These estimates are likely to rise further, with the reopening of advanced economies the primary determinant," Malpass said.

The World Bank president noted that policy choices made today - including greater debt transparency to invite new investment, faster advances in digital connectivity, and a major expansion of cash safety nets for the poor - will help limit the damage and build a stronger recovery.

"The financing and building of productive infrastructure are among the hardest-to-solve development challenges in the post-pandemic recovery," Malpass said. "We need to see measures to speed litigation and the resolution of bankruptcies and reform the costly subsidies, monopolies and protected state-owned enterprises that have slowed development." (Sputnik/ANI)

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

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