Publications /
Opinion

Back
Five Big Questions on the Global Economic Outlook
September 10, 2021

The COVID-19 pandemic caused a shock to both demand and supply, leading to the biggest collapse in world output since the Great Depression. Since late 2020, a more rapid than expected recovery has been observed. Five questions arise frequently. Here is my take on those questions.

1- Is the pandemic receding?

No, but we have a vaccine to control it, and are better at managing it with selective measures, as distinct from total lockdowns, which kill the economy. The global number of new cases remains high as the highly contagious Delta variant spreads, with the epicenter shifting constantly across nations and within them. At the time of writing, the Southern U.S., a very large economy, is one hotspot. We are amid a global third wave, and a fourth wave is likely to follow in the Northern Hemisphere as winter approaches. Across the world, about 10,000 people a day die of COVID-19, compared to about 14,000/day reached in the previous two peaks. Vaccinations are reducing the incidence of severe disease in advanced countries, and vaccines are quickly becoming widely available in the rest of the world. The present global vaccination rate is 38 million per day, which, if maintained, means 75% of the world population will be vaccinated with at least one dose by the end of January 2022. The last great pandemic (1918) faded after three years despite the lack of vaccines. The COVID-19 outbreak is about 18 months old and there may be another 12-18 months to go before it recedes as a major threat. This expectation, or rather, guess, assumes that new variants of the virus will not prove to be more resistant to vaccines than the present ones. Some large African countries, including Ethiopia, DRC, and Cameroon, are still essentially unvaccinated, and they will be the last to see the end of the epidemic.

2- Is the global recovery likely to be sustained?

Most likely, yes, but at a much slower pace than in the first half of 2021. In Q2 2021, 32 of the 40 largest economies grew at a year-over-year rate of 7% or more, with the Eurozone growing at 13.6%, the U.S. at 12.2%, and China at 7.9%. Many developing countries, including Morocco, saw double digit growth in this period. Most recently contemporaneous and leading indicators, from world trade to PMI (Purchasing Managers' Index) have shown a substantial deceleration. The return to work, monetary and fiscal stimulus, and pent-up demand drove growth to unprecedented peaks, but their effects are now abating. Underutilization of labor persists, and as the pandemic continues but becomes more manageable, the global economy is likely to continue to grow at a rate above the long-term trend, say 4%-4.5% over the next year, gradually returning to a sustainable pace near 3% in 2023. If this projection is correct, it will represent a much faster global recovery than that from the Global Financial Crisis of 2008-2009.

3- Is the surge in inflation in the U.S. and Europe likely to be transitory?

Most likely, yes, but headline inflation will remain high over the next twelve months or so. Despite the surge in oil and other commodity prices over the last year (food and industrial commodities up about 20%, with oil prices doubling) and the explosion of freight rates, high inflation is not at this point a global phenomenon. In China and Japan, inflation remains very low, and it is under 2% in several advanced countries. In many developing countries inflation is still quite low, as in Morocco. However, year-over-year consumer price inflation exceeded 5% in the U.S. and was at 3% in the Eurozone in July 2021. There is yet little indication that these high rates are becoming built into expectations, but their continuation over a long period would be bound to lead to increased wage demands, especially – but not only - in highly unionized contexts. The best bet is that inflationary pressures will abate as demand decelerates and the many supply disruptions caused by the pandemic are resolved. Still, inflation is an indicator that bears careful watching because if it forces a sharp tightening in monetary policy, the consequences will be severe across all high-leverage contexts.   

4- Is a major correction in global financial markets likely?

Yes, but the macroeconomic impact will probably remain manageable. Over the last two years, since before the pandemic, the S&P 500 is up about 50%, the Eurosoxx50 is up just under 20%, and the MSCI Asia-Pacific is up about 25%. Especially in the U.S., stock prices compared to earnings are extremely high. The yield on less-than-investment-grade (junk) bonds adjusted for inflation is near zero or negative. The present ‘goldilocks’ environment, characterized by zero short-term policy interest rates, rapid growth and still-contained inflation expectations, is the best of all possible worlds for stocks and for investment in risk assets. Those include emerging markets, which have retained access to bond markets, but have been largely absent from the stock market party. Housing prices in many countries are soaring. It is a reasonable bet that sometime over the next year or two, and perhaps sooner rather than later, a correction (20% or more decline) will occur. The correction may be triggered by new virus variants, slowing growth, a shift in inflation expectations, or tightening monetary policy, already under serious consideration in the Eurozone. While the correction will be painful for individual investors, and the most-exposed emerging markets will see a flight from risk assets, it need not turn into a generalized economic downturn. Insofar as the risk is presently borne by those most informed and best positioned to bear it, and insofar as banking systems are well capitalized and adequately hedged—which appear reasonable assumptions—the episode can be contained.

5- Will the pandemic have major long-term repercussions?

Yes, most importantly in the form of higher public debt levels. OECD government borrowing in 2020 amounted to nearly 30% of GDP. In 2021, pandemic-related borrowing is continuing. The U.S. budget deficit is projected at nearly 13% of GDP in 2021; in the Eurozone it is projected at over 7%. This debt—which is presently sustainable given low interest rates—will constrain countercyclical fiscal policy, transfers, and public investment in decades to come. The pandemic has triggered big structural shifts in demand, for example from commercial to residential real estate, and accelerated the shift from brick retailers to on-line, which will take years to play out. At the same time, big productivity and lifestyle improvements from remote work appear far more feasible and likely than was apparent before the pandemic. Finally, the pandemic has increased the income gap between the highly educated who can work remotely, and manual workers, and appears to have shifted income even farther from labor to capital, especially to owners of internet platform businesses and their suppliers. This high and increasing inequality undermines the social contract. In different ways, governments in China, Italy, Morocco, and the United States – to cite examples - are responding by adopting a wide range of progressive and redistributive policies. This, too, may prove to be a legacy of Covid-19.

 

The opinions expressed in this article belong to the author.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    September 3, 2020
    The “middle income trap” may well characterize the experience of Brazil and most of Latin America since the 1980s. Conversely, South Korea maintained its pace of evolution, reaching a high-income status. Such divergence of economic growth can be related to their distinctive performances of domestic accumulation of technological and organizational capabilities. Their different approaches to global value chains and trade globalization reinforced such discrepancy in domestic accumulati ...
  • Authors
    August 10, 2020
    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) released, on August 4th, its ninth annual External Sector Report, where current account imbalances and asset-liability stocks of 30 systemically large economies are approached. This time the report went beyond looking the previous year and tried to anticipate what will be some of the impacts of the still on-going COVID-19 crisis. The report shows that the global economy entered the COVID-19 crisis with a configuration of external imbalances tha ...
  • Authors
    August 6, 2020
    La COVID-19 a asséné un puissant coup de massue à l’économie mondiale, en combinant une terrible pandémie à un effondrement de la production dû au confinement de la moitié de la population active mondiale. L’incertitude générée par le choc médical et économique paralyse les consommateurs et les investisseurs, et la dispersion des prévisions économiques à court terme est plus grande qu’elle ne l’a jamais été dans l’histoire moderne, environ six fois plus que lors de la grande crise f ...
  • Authors
    Karim EL Mokri
    July 27, 2020
    The current pandemic has hit all countries hard, with severe repercussions at all levels. In economic terms, and given the scale of the damage, countries have reacted quickly by drawing on their available toolboxes. However, unlike in 2008, room for maneuver this time is much more limited and many countries have no choice but to go into massive debt to cope with the effects of the pandemic. For a country like Morocco, such a situation should lead the authorities concerned to study a ...
  • July 24, 2020
    Depuis 2018, le Ghana est considéré par le Fonds monétaire international (FMI) comme le bon élève de l'Afrique. Bon élève dans le respect de la démocratie qui lui permet d'attirer de nombreux investisseurs mais, aussi, bon élève de par les résultats économiques obtenus pour réduire son inflation et relancer sa croissance économique, suite à un programme d'ajustement structurel, soutenu par le FMI, mis en place en 2015, et qui s'est achevé en 2019. Ces résultats, le Ghana les doit a ...
  • Authors
    July 20, 2020
    There are signs of recovery in various parts of the global economy, starting in May, after the depressive dip imposed by Covid-19. Such signs emerged after the easing of restrictions on mobility established to flatten out the pandemic curves, and also reflected policies of flattening the recession curve (income transfers to part of the population, credit lines to vulnerable companies and others). Besides remaining far from giving back the GDP lost, in all countries, the recovery fa ...
  • Authors
    July 20, 2020
    This article was originally published on Bruegel. The global economy is showing signs of recovery from the economic crisis caused by COVID-19, though the spread of the coronavirus is accelerating in some countries. In this circumstance, policymakers must weigh up the trade-offs involved in dealing with the pandemic while easing lock downs and sustaining economic activity. Differences in age structures, urbanisation rates and other factors will inform decision making in different co ...
  • Authors
    Amine Benbernou
    Dorothée Schmid
    July 9, 2020
    Middle Eastern geopolitics is currently undergoing structural changes: the regional order is in transition in the aftermath of the Arab Spring that undermined authoritarian governance, and triggered the competition for power against a backdrop of American withdrawal. This new race for regional domination challenges the traditional hierarchy of powers that is mainly based on military capacity and the interplay of foreign alliances. The economy, which had previously guaranteed the pol ...
  • Authors
    Alioune Sall
    Moubarack Lo
    July 2, 2020
    La transformation de la Communauté Economique des Etats de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (CEDEAO) en « confédération d’Etats » est parfois évoquée, y compris au niveau des Chefs d’Etat de la Communauté, comme une prochaine étape naturelle du processus d’approfondissement de l’intégration en Afrique de l’Ouest. La présente étude a pour objet d’en explorer la faisabilité et la pertinence, en se fondant sur l’expérience vécue dans d’autres continents. Une Confédération d’Etats peut être défini ...
  • Authors
    Datu Sadja Matthew Pajares Yngson
    June 30, 2020
    Unless trade wars end around the globe, the world is headed for the biggest recession in living memory. The crisis arising from the coronavirus will hit fragile economies in Africa, the Pacific, and the Caribbean the hardest. At such a time, the world should be dropping barriers but, instead, new barriers are being built. In the past month, U.S. President Donald Trump threatened retaliation against India unless it released supplies of hydroxychloroquine. Worse still, he got his way ...