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Policymakers Must Coordinate Route to Global Recovery
Our World Economic Forecast, taken from the National Institute Economic Review
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Pub. Date
29 July, 2020
Pub. Type
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This content is restricted to corporate members, NiGEM subscribers and NIESR partners.
Authors
Dr Xuxin Mao
Dr Kemar Whyte
Dr Corrado Macchiarelli
External Authors
Kara, Amit
Related Themes
Macro-Economic Modelling and ForecastingJournal
National Institute Economic Review, No. 1, Vol. 253
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
External Resources
Key points
- The Covid-19 pandemic and the effects of the measures taken to protect lives continue to dominate the short-term global economic outlook.
- In still highly uncertain times, there are widespread falls in GDP as lockdowns pause many forms of economic activity. Some countries are now starting to unlock, permitting a wider range of economic activities to be undertaken and allowing increased mobility. The effects of unlocking are uncertain, especially with the number of people infected still rising.
- We project that global GDP will fall by 5 per cent this year, a substantially larger fall than during the financial crisis, taking global GDP back to 2018 levels, with unemployment rising as a consequence.
- Once economic activity re-establishes after lockdowns are lifted, the increase in output could result in substantial year-on-year increases in GDP next year. We project an increase of 6¼ per cent in global GDP. Even with such an increase, however, the level of GDP at the end of 2021 will be lower than had the pandemic not occurred.
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