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Post Covid 19 Economic impact on the world?

US economic recovery may take years, NY Fed president says

The pace of the US economy's recovery is being slowed by new coronavirus outbreaks, while some states could struggle for years, New York Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams has said.

“People have been getting back to work and the unemployment rate has started to edge down,” Mr Williams said, according to remarks prepared for a virtual event focused on central banking during Covid-19.

“Although this improvement is welcome, the economy is still far from healthy and a full recovery will likely take years to achieve.”

Large outbreaks will hamper economic recovery, he added.

“This is a valuable reminder that the economy’s fate is inextricably linked to the path of the virus,” he said. “A strong economic recovery depends on effective and sustained containment of Covid-19."
 
John Lewis has announced the closure of eight shops: two department stores in Birmingham and Watford, four At Home shops in Croydon, Newbury, Swindon and Tamworth, and two travel hub outlets at Heathrow and St Pancras.

It said the shops were already "financially challenged" before the pandemic, which has seen the shift towards online shopping increase.

The group estimates between 60% and 70% of its sales will be made online this year and next, compared with 40% before the coronavirus crisis.

This move puts 1300 jobs at risk.

And in other jobs news, Burger King UK's boss has warned it may have to lose up to 1,600 jobs as a result of the pandemic.

Around only 370 of its 530 UK stores have reopened since lockdown.

The restaurant chain's chief executive Alasdair Murdoch told the BBC the economic damage stemming from the crisis could ultimately force the company to permanently close up to 10% of its stores.

He said: "We don't want to lose any (jobs). We try very hard not to, but one's got to assume somewhere between 5% and 10% of the restaurants might not be able to survive."
 
Abu Dhabi Fund for Development has suspended debt service repayments for some countries and companies for the year, the state-financed fund announced.

The fund provides financial assistance to companies in the United Arab Emirates and to developing countries, which has included Pakistan, Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia.

Debt service repayments would be suspended for eligible countries and individual companies in the developing world from January 1 until December 31, the fund said in a statement.

Countries and companies would need to request to have repayments suspended, it said.

The fund did not say what the criteria would need to be met to be eligible for the scheme.

"At a time when the world is reeling under the effect of the pandemic ... it is imperative for us to support particularly those that need it most, especially the low-income countries," the fund's director general Mohammed Saif al-Suwaidi said.
 
France, Italy and Spain have plunged into recession, after their coronavirus-ravaged economies suffered sharp contractions in gross domestic product (GDP).

Figures showed their economies all shrank in the second quarter of the financial year between April and June, as lockdown measures took their toll.

A recession is commonly defined as two consecutive quarters of a contraction in GDP.

In the second quarter:

Spain’s GDP fell by 18.5%
Italy’s GDP fell by 12.4%
France’s GDP fell by 13.8%

The US also posted dire economic figures on Thursday. The figures showed the US economy shrank by an annual rate of 32.9% between April and June, its worst downturn since World War Two.
 
UK economy still 11.7% below pre-pandemic level in July - ONS

The economy remained 11.7% below its coronavirus pandemic peak in July as the UK emerges from its sharpest recession on record, official figures show

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 6.6% in the month as more parts of the economy awakened from the enforced hibernation of the COVID-19 lockdown.

The deep sleep for activity sparked the largest recession in UK history in the second quarter of the year - a slump of 20.4% - driven by the first full month of COVID-19 restrictions in April.

Month-on-month growth was recorded in May and June.

ONS director of economic statistics Darren Morgan said of July's growth: "While it has continued steadily on the path towards recovery, the UK economy still has to make up nearly half of the GDP lost since the start of the pandemic.

"Education grew strongly as some children returned to school, while pubs, campsites and hairdressers all saw notable improvements.

"Car sales exceeded pre-crisis levels for the first time with showrooms having a particularly busy time.

"All areas of manufacturing, particularly distillers and car makers, saw improvements, while housebuilding also continued to recover.

"However, both production and construction remain well below previous levels."

The update on the economy was released as ministers come under greater pressure to heed warnings of a deepening employment crisis as the Job Retention Scheme, that has supported wages of almost 10 million people during the crisis, is wound down.
 
The boss of one of the UK's most successful and resilient High Street chains has told the BBC that hundreds of thousands of traditional retail jobs may not survive in the wake of the coronavirus crisis.

Lord Wolfson, who runs clothing firm Next, said there was a clear threat to thousands of jobs, which are now "unviable" because the lockdown has triggered a permanent shift to online shopping.

"I wouldn't want to underestimate the difficulty that is going to cause a lot of people who work in retail, I think it's going to be very uncomfortable," he said.

His comments came just hours after the chancellor announced a new Job Support Scheme that would see the government top up the pay of people unable to work full time.

But the government's contribution to workers' pay will fall sharply compared with the furlough scheme. Under furlough, it initially paid 80% of a monthly wage up to £2,500 - under the new scheme this will drop to 22%.

"We don't think we need it," Lord Wolfson said. "But we think there are other sectors that desperately will."
 
IMF estimates global Covid cost at $28tn in lost output

The International Monetary Fund has scaled back its estimate of the hit to the global economy from Covid-19 this year but warned that the final bill for the pandemic would total $28tn (£21.5tn) in lost output.

In its flagship world economic outlook, the IMF said a stronger than expected performance in the second and third quarters meant it believed global output would fall by 4.4% in 2020 compared with the 5.2% drop forecast during the summer.

But the Washington-based organisation said rising infection rates in some emerging market economies had forced it to pare back its estimate of the rebound in 2021 from 5.4% to 5.2%. The gap between rich and poor countries was growing, it added.

Gita Gopinath, the IMF’s economic counsellor, described Covid-19 as the worst crisis since the Great Depression, and said the pandemic would leave deep and enduring scars caused by job losses, weaker investment and children being deprived of education.

“The cumulative loss in output relative to the pre-pandemic projected path is projected to grow from $11tn over 2020-21 to $28tn over 2020-25,” Gopinath said in a blog. “This represents a severe setback to the improvement in average living standards across all country groups.”

The IMF said swift action by central banks had softened the impact of the damage to economic activity caused by lockdowns, and warned against the premature removal of support measures.

Gopinath said: “The considerable global fiscal support of close to $12tn and the extensive rate cuts, liquidity injections, and asset purchases by central banks helped save lives and livelihoods and prevented a financial catastrophe.”

With the UK announcing a tiered system of local lockdowns this week, Gopinath said that “to the extent possible, policies must aggressively focus on limiting persistent economic damage from this crisis”.

She said: “Governments should continue to provide income support through well targeted cash transfers, wage subsidies, and unemployment insurance. To prevent large-scale bankruptcies and ensure workers can return to productive jobs, vulnerable but viable firms should continue to receive support – wherever possible – through tax deferrals, moratoria on debt service and equity-like injections.”

The WEO’s country-by-country breakdown predicted the UK economy would shrink by 9.8% this year. This is an improvement on the 10.2% decline forecast in the summer but still the joint second worst alongside France among the G7 group of industrialised nations.

The US is expected to be the least affected of the major advanced economies: the IMF expectis a contraction in output of 4.3%. Only Italy, projected to suffer a 10.6% drop in activity, will fare worse than the UK this year, the IMF said.

Canada alone of the G7 countries is now expected to grow more rapidly in 2021 than was forecast in June. The IMF said it had cut its estimate of UK growth by 0.4 points to 5.9% next year.

Gopinath said that while the world was adapting and coming back from the depths of its collapse in the early months of 2020, the crisis was far from over.

“Employment remains well below pre-pandemic levels and the labour market has become more polarised with low-income workers, youth, and women being harder hit,” she said. “The poor are getting poorer with close to 90 million people expected to fall into extreme deprivation this year. The ascent out of this calamity is likely to be long, uneven and highly uncertain.”

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/oct/13/imf-covid-cost-world-economic-outlook
 
South Korea rebounds from COVID recession on export recovery

GDP grows 1.9% in third quarter, but service sector remains weak

SEOUL -- The South Korean economy rebounded from a COVID-induced recession in the third quarter as demand for exports grew following the relaxing of lockdowns in the region.

Asia's fourth-largest economy grew a seasonally adjusted 1.9% during the July-September period from the previous quarter, the Bank of Korea said Tuesday. That's a faster pace than the 1.7% median forecast of 12 economists polled by Reuters, and compares with a 3.2% fall in April-June -- the sharpest contraction since 1998.

South Korean exports to the U.S. grew 23.2% in September from a year earlier, and rose 15.4% to Europe. The rebound comes as key overseas markets are reopening their economies after strict lockdowns in the second quarter.

But the central bank warned that resurgence of COVID-19 in Europe and the U.S. pose risks to the country's economy in the fourth quarter, and pointed out that South Korea's domestic demand remained weak despite heavy government spending to support the economy.

The BOK said that strong social distancing rules in greater Seoul in September may have dragged down private consumption. "We estimate that social distancing from the Covid-19 may have lowered the GDP by 0.4% point to 0.5% point," said Park Yang-soo, a director at the BOK, in a press briefing.

Analysts say the country's service sector remains weak as the coronavirus has decoupled it from the manufacturing industry.

"COVID-19 has accelerated the disconnect between the manufacturing and services economies, disproportionately hurting the services sector," said Park Jeong-woo, Korea economist at Nomura. "Even as the manufacturing sector has rebounded following the relaxing of lockdowns, the services remained subdued."

The state-run Korea Development Institute said that the struggle for global leadership between the U.S. and China poses risks to the South Korea's economy as its exports heavily rely on the world's two biggest economies.

"The U.S.-China conflicts can raise uncertainties in the global economy, causing risks to the world's trade and financial markets. It may burden our economy, hurting our exports," the KDI said in a report.

Even so, analysts said that South Korea will become one of the best-performing economies in the world this year.

"If the economy continues to recover, as we expect, then GDP will likely contract by 1.0% this year," said Alex Holmes, Asia economist at Capital Economics. "While this would be the worst performance since 1998, it would still make Korea one of the best-performing economies in the world this year."

Source: https://asia.nikkei.com/Economy/South-Korea-rebounds-from-COVID-recession-on-export-recovery
 
Egypt to see unprecedented tourism demand after COVID-19: Pundits

(MENAFN - Daily News Egypt) Tour operators and tourism sector experts have unanimously agreed that there will be unprecedented demand for travel to Egypt in the period following the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, according to Maged Abu Sidira, head of the Central Department for International Tourism at the Egyptian Tourism Promotion Authority.

Abu Sidira's comments came during Egypt's participation at the World Travel Market (WTM) which took place in London, where it was represented by the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities. The WTM launched its activities virtually this year from 9 to 11 November, and saw the participation of 150 countries, 1,290 exhibitors, and 1,355 representatives of tour operators, international airlines, and unions for international and world tourism.

Abu Sidira said that Egypt has also participated in a number of important meetings that were held with the aim of identifying the latest developments in the global tourism movement. They also looked into studying the best means of dealing with the current global crisis.

The meetings were held in the presence of representatives overseeing the British market, which were held with a number of major tour operators and airlines in the United Kingdom, including Easy Jet Holidays, Holiday Gems, On The Beach, Love Holidays, and You Travel.

Meanwhile, Abu Sidira said that he also met with officials of the Association of British Travel Agents (ABTA).

Abu Sidira said that, during these meetings, methods of cooperation were discussed to restore Egypt's tourist movement from the most important markets, and to start developing plans to implement them as soon as the global situation improved.

He pointed out that during a meeting with ABTA officials, he reviewed the precautionary measures taken by Egypt to ensure incoming tourist movement could resume. In response, ABTA officials confirmed that they would present the measures taken by Egypt during their meeting scheduled for next week with the British government committee that prepares reports on the safe international tourist destinations.

Corporate officials also showed great interest in finding out more information on when the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) will open. They stressed that it will represent an important starting point for Egyptian tourism.

Several promotional films about Egypt and its various tourism patterns were also shown, in addition to a presentation introducing Egyptian tourism products and the latest major national projects. These also reviewed the controls for resuming tourism movement, including all precautionary measures taken to confront the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Source: https://menafn.com/1101125818/Egypt-to-see-unprecedented-tourism-demand-after-COVID-19-Pundits.
 
Topshop, Burton and Dorothy Perkins owner, UK retail giant Arcadia, goes into administration - with 13,000 jobs at risk
 
Topshop, Burton and Dorothy Perkins owner, UK retail giant Arcadia, goes into administration - with 13,000 jobs at risk

It was on the cards. It's not just 13000 job losses though, Arcadia's suppliers are owed over 250M! Suppliers cutting jobs due to non payment could a 10000s more.
 
China's economy grows 18.3% in post-Covid comeback

China's economy grew a record 18.3% in the first quarter of 2021 compared to the same quarter last year.

It's the biggest jump in gross domestic product (GDP) since China started keeping quarterly records in 1992.

However, Friday's figures are below expectations, with a Reuters poll of economists predicting 19% growth.

They are also heavily skewed, and less indicative of strong growth, as they are compared to last year's huge economic contraction.

In the first quarter of 2020, China's economy shrank 6.8% due to nationwide lockdowns at the peak of its Covid-19 outbreak.

"The national economy made a good start," said China's National Bureau of Statistics, which released the first quarter data.

But it added: "We must be aware that the Covid-19 epidemic is still spreading globally and the international landscape is complicated with high uncertainties and instabilities."

Other key figures released by China's statistics department also point to a continuing rebound, but are also unusually strong because they are compared against extremely weak numbers from last year.

Industrial output for March rose 14.1% over a year ago, while retail sales grew 34.2%.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-56768663
 
NEW YORK (APP) – Minister for Planning, Development and Special initiatives Prof. Ahsan Iqbal Tuesday called upon the United Nations to champion the issue of Ukraine-Russia war to protect the developing countries including Pakistan, from extreme shocks of supply chains causing delays in achieving the targets of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

“There is a need at UN level to champion this issue that countries like Pakistan and many developing countries are facing extreme economic situation due to the doubling and tripling of the commodity prices in the international markets,” the minister said while speaking at the virtual event here titled “Mobilizing the private sector for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Voluntary National Reviews (VNRs)”.

The event was organised by UN Global Compact (UNGC). The minister said the countries like Pakistan were now under heavy pressure of these increased commodity prices which also resulted in creating financial burden on private sector.

Therefore, he said the government was finding it difficult with the private sector to have extra resources for the programmes that they were doing for SDGs.

Mr Iqbal stressed the need for some kind of relief for such developing countries to enable the private sector in contributing towards SDGs.

He said immediately after launch of SDGs in 2015, Pakistan Parliament adopted the international SDGs as its National development goals.

“We tried to give ownership to this agenda from the very beginning. This is not a global agenda this is our own national agenda,” he added.

He said Pakistan was among the top 10 vulnerable countries as far as climate change was concerned and to cope with this issue, the government was very actively working..

“We have also partnered with the private sector to create more jobs in the business because we are very young country and around two third of the population is very young.”

The minister informed that the government is also trying to work very closely with private sector to provide maximum jobs to the youth.

“We offer internship programmes to the young graduates and under graduates so that their employability becomes easier and they get more jobs,” he added.

The minister added that the government had also started major advocacy programme with the private sector particular to sensitize small and medium size business towards the benefits of adopting SDGs practices.

That will give us much broader penetration in the private sector because we found that big businesses were sensitive, they had greater awareness, and they were partnering with us but amongst small and medium enterprise there was knowledge gap. “So through our own advocacy we are trying to bridge the gap and get them on board.”

He said during last three years, the country like Pakistan suffered greatly from COVID-19 which impacted the entire sectors of businesses.

And now in the post COVID period , we are badly hit by the supply chain shocks and this situation also triggered due to the Ukraine war.

DUNYA
 
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