Only Governments Can Prevent Covid 19 Recessions Becoming Depressions



By Jomo Kwame Sundaram, IPS
Covid-19 threatens economic life the world over. The most urgent and important need is for governments, businesses and families to survive. Governments must revive economies and livelihoods to prevent Covid-19 recessions from becoming protracted depressions.
The Covid-19 crisis is clearly a ‘black swan event’, threatening both public health and livelihoods. Both the pandemic and containment efforts are not due to business operations and decisions, but nonetheless have compelling consequences for them.
Covid-19 contagion contractionary, costly
In East Asia and a few other societies, successful early precautionary and preventive measures, as well as testing, tracking and treatment of the infected, plus sufficient physical distancing, isolation and quarantine measures have been enough to contain the contagion so far.
When such measures were not taken, inadequate or failed, ‘stay in shelter’ lockdowns became necessary as contagion spread. Nationwide lockdowns have been imposed in many countries. Such preventive and other precautionary measures have reduced economic activity and demand in many sectors.
But trying to maintain aggregate demand as if there is no pandemic does not make sense. No matter what governments do, some output losses are unavoidable. So, the main challenge in addressing Covid-19 recessions is to avoid protracted recessions or depressions.
Due to the continued need for physical distancing and other precautionary measures, likely to remain for some time to come, vaccine or no vaccine, some business disruptions may be more lasting than others, i.e., more likely to be medium, if not long-term.
No ‘one size fits all’
Economies are neither monolithic nor homogenous, and no single inflexible policy can possibly be suitable for all. As recessions are uneven in impact, different sectors, industries, services and businesses are affected differently. Covid-19 recessions are also unlike other past recessions.
Many businesses may not be able to survive major stoppages and demand shortfalls, however temporary. Such businesses could go bankrupt, severely affecting workers’ families, related businesses and those directly and indirectly employed.
Much has to be learnt quickly from other experiences, and from learning by doing. Some businesses and sectors may not be able to survive, and options should include business redeployment, infrastructure and facility repurposing as well as staff retraining.
Strict verification and correction can take place later, even after the lockdown is over. Conditions should be strict enough to deter abuse, but not participation. For example, government grants or subsidies, later found to be ‘excessive’, can be converted into low interest loans that governments recover later, rather than treated as criminal fraud.
Business disruptions threaten livelihoods
Business disruption has broader implications, threatening the entire economy with long-term costs. If relations — including trust among entrepreneurs, workers and customers — are disrupted, they will need to be rebuilt, requiring time and expense.
Conventional economics ignores ‘transactions costs’ incurred in recruiting workers, seeking and keeping clients and customers, obtaining credit and investing capital, building trust, and other relations, and thus is a poor guide to policy.
The adverse effects of livelihood disruption should be minimised. Income maintenance policies need to help fired workers and others whose livelihoods have been greatly diminished. Hence, extraordinary and novel social protection measures are needed.
Helping businesses survive enforced idleness or hibernation due to such measures, and protecting livelihoods are both needed. Businesses, especially smaller ones with fewer reserves, will need help to keep their workers and to avoid liquidating their businesses.
Simple payment systems help. Idle workers should immediately receive special social protection, while staying formally employed. Such measures will minimise rehiring costs when they return to work, but should not excessively burden their employers with debt.
Only governments can help
Governments may not be able to stop, let alone reverse or fully compensate for the effects of public health measures. But they can certainly help alleviate economic hardship due to the epidemic, and minimise lasting damage to the economy.
Crucially, timely government interventions can prevent unavoidable, potentially brief recessions from becoming longer lasting stagnations or depressions. Without appropriate government measures, output losses due to work disruption will cause large business losses leading to mass layoffs.
Even when no longer operating, rent, lease, infrastructure, utility and other such payments vital for business maintenance and employees’ welfare, such as health protection for employees, need to be made or absorbed. Some, mainly developed countries have acted promptly and appropriately to minimise layoffs, business destruction and worker welfare.
Governments can also act more boldly to subordinate unproductive rentier claims, based on asset ownerhip or property rights, to much more essential operating costs — not unlike how US bankruptcy law enables businesses to continue operating to work themselves out of their predicaments.
Current support often inappropriate
Many governments have provided liquidity — e.g., usually by offering low-interest or interest-free loans — to help businesses and workers survive the crisis. But such measures only ‘smoothen’ debt burdens over longer periods, ‘postponing the pain’, without reimbursing or compensating victims for their income losses.
Temporary and partial compensation for income losses enables businesses to quickly resume operations after lockdowns end, rather than having to also contend with additional debt burdens. Many businesses need help to survive, and aid can be provided conditionally, e.g., on avoiding or minimising employee retrenchments.
Postponing tax payments also helps, but tend to benefit the better-off, liable for more tax, rather than those most adversely affected or needy.
Direct payments undoubtedly help. But without some ‘easy’ targeting, especially for businesses, often, too little is available for those in greatest need, while benefiting some who are not.
Although policymakers typically insist on means-testing for anti-poverty programmes, they rarely demand targeting for businesses, reducing the efficacy of government relief.
An already existing, developed social protection system makes it easier to ‘compensate’ idle workers, but is rarely available in developing and transition economies.
Lowly-paid and casual workers and many self-employed typically have debt, more than savings. Not able to survive temporary losses, they are more likely to be displaced by lockdowns, and less likely to work from home. Government ‘unemployment benefits’ can easily be made progressive, with a higher fraction of previous earnings for the poorest.
Government ‘payer of last resort’
In March, French economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, both at Berkeley, proposed that governments help ease pain and disruption with payer-of-last-resort programmes, with adversely affected businesses reporting unavoidable monthly overhead and maintenance costs to qualify for government aid.
A government ‘payer-of-last-resort’ during lockdowns can thus help ‘suspended’ or ‘hibernating’ businesses to continue paying unavoidable maintenance bills to avoid insolvency on condition of keeping their involuntarily idle workers, instead of firing them.
Such a payer-of-last-resort programme would reduce hardship for workers and businesses. It could enable businesses to temporarily suspend or scale down operations, to limit haemorrhage and avoid insolvency, and to pick up quickly as conditions improve.
It would maintain ‘cash flow’ for families and businesses, minimising Covid-19 shocks’ adverse secondary impacts on demand (e.g., due to fired workers spending less on consumption), while enabling more rapid recovery as demand resumes.
Payer-of-last-resort programmes can be affordable if well complemented by effective contagion containment measures, enabling early resumption of business operations. While unavoidably high for lockdowns, government spending, typically financed by sovereign debt, can remain manageable.
 


Artikel ini hanyalah simpanan cache dari url asal penulis yang berkebarangkalian sudah terlalu lama atau sudah dibuang :

https://www.malaysia-today.net/2020/07/30/only-governments-can-prevent-covid-19-recessions-becoming-depressions/

Kempen Promosi dan Iklan
Kami memerlukan jasa baik anda untuk menyokong kempen pengiklanan dalam website kami. Serba sedikit anda telah membantu kami untuk mengekalkan servis percuma aggregating ini kepada semua.

Anda juga boleh memberikan sumbangan anda kepada kami dengan menghubungi kami di sini
Governments Worldwide Losing Support Over Covid 19

Governments Worldwide Losing Support Over Covid 19

papar berkaitan - pada 25/7/2020 - jumlah : 129 hits
Governments are fast losing support for their handling of the coronavirus outbreak from a public that widely believes death and infection figures to be higher than statistics show a survey of six countries revealed on Saturday Support for t...
Moh Intensifying Avoid Close Contact Campaign To Prevent Covid 19 Second Wave

Moh Intensifying Avoid Close Contact Campaign To Prevent Covid 19 Second Wave

papar berkaitan - pada 19/7/2020 - jumlah : 203 hits
Datuk Seri Dr Adham Baba 8211 Bernama file photo KUALA KANGSAR The Health Ministry is actively implementing the Avoid Close Contact 8217 campaign as a step to prevent a second wave of Covid 19 outbreak in the country Minister Datuk Seri Dr ...
Covid 19 Banks Can Take Another Moratorium Extension But Make It Selective Coverage Say Economists

Covid 19 Banks Can Take Another Moratorium Extension But Make It Selective Coverage Say Economists

papar berkaitan - pada 18/7/2020 - jumlah : 236 hits
The Malaysian banking sector is sufficiently sturdy to withstand a plausible extension of the loans moratorium which came into effect in April say economists Picture by Sayuti ZainudinKUALA LUMPUR July 18 Economists have opined the Malaysia...
Sering Remehkan Corona Presiden Brasil Positif Covid 19 Untuk Ketiga Kalinya

Sering Remehkan Corona Presiden Brasil Positif Covid 19 Untuk Ketiga Kalinya

papar berkaitan - pada 23/7/2020 - jumlah : 185 hits
Presiden Brasil Jair Bolsonaro kembali dinyatakan positif Corona dalam tes yang ia lakukan ketiga kalinya Sebelumnya ia sudah dinyatakan terinfeksi COVID 19 sejak 7 Juli lalu Kondisi ini membuat Bolsorano harus kembali menjalani karantina s...
16 New Covid 19 Cases

16 New Covid 19 Cases

papar berkaitan - pada 23/7/2020 - jumlah : 268 hits
Provided by New Straits Times Malaysia continues to stay in the double digits with 16 new Covid 19 cases Photo by MUHD ASYRAF SAWAL NSTPnews nst com myKUALA LUMPUR Malaysia continues to stay in the double digits with 16 new Covid 19 cases r...
Penambahan Kasus Covid 19 Di Dki 23 Juli Tembus 400 Orang Total 17 951 Positif

Penambahan Kasus Covid 19 Di Dki 23 Juli Tembus 400 Orang Total 17 951 Positif

papar berkaitan - pada 23/7/2020 - jumlah : 164 hits
Dari jumlah tersebut 11 302 orang dinyatakan telah sembuh sedangkan 767 orang meninggal dunia
Kemendagri Jelaskan Pernyataan Tito Tentang Jenazah Korban Covid Sebaiknya Dibakar

Kemendagri Jelaskan Pernyataan Tito Tentang Jenazah Korban Covid Sebaiknya Dibakar

papar berkaitan - pada 23/7/2020 - jumlah : 163 hits
Pernyataan Tito menjadi perbincangan di dunia maya Pihak Kemendagri langsung melakukan klarifikasi
Passenger On Kl Kuching Flight Among 16 New Covid 19 Cases

Passenger On Kl Kuching Flight Among 16 New Covid 19 Cases

papar berkaitan - pada 23/7/2020 - jumlah : 255 hits
CORONAVIRUS A passenger on a Kuala Lumpur Kuching flight was among the 16 new Covid 19 cases reported today The passenger was the second person on the same flight to have been infected with Covid 19 Health Ministry director general Dr Noor ...
Polis Bolivia Temui Lebih 400 Mayat Di Jalanan Dan Kawasan Perumahan Dipercayai Dijangkiti Covid 19

Polis Bolivia Temui Lebih 400 Mayat Di Jalanan Dan Kawasan Perumahan Dipercayai Dijangkiti Covid 19

papar berkaitan - pada 23/7/2020 - jumlah : 176 hits
Bolivia yang memiliki populasi sebanyak 11 juta penduduk kehilangan lebih 2 200 orang ekoran kematian disebabkan oleh COVID 19 Pihak polis baru baru ini menemui bahawa terdapat lebih 400 mayat di jalanan dan di kawasan perumahan di mana 85 ...
Lumira Eka Heights Seremban Perumahan Gaya Hidup Moden

Plaza Premium Group Expands Flight Club Dining Brand At Kuala Lumpur International Airport Terminal 1

Splash Out Langkawi Awarded Gold Rating By Malaysia Tourism Quality Assurance

Lahirkan Generasi Fasih Digital Kpm Mahu Guru Jauhari Digital Jadi Pembimbing

Plaza Premium Group Kembangkan Jenama Restoran Flight Club Di Terminal 1 Lapangan Terbang Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur

Samsung Knox Vault Ciri Keselamatan Wajib Untuk Semua Pemilik Telefon Pintar

Duit Syiling Peringatan 50 Tahun Lembaga Pertubuhan Peladang

Lelaki Cina Pun Boleh Terpikat Iklan Perfume Dikecam Guna Model Wanita Jadi Umpan Tarik Perhatian Bukan Mahram



10 Fakta Biodata Jabir Meftah Pelakon Drama Berepisod Racun Rihanna TV3

Biodata Dan Latar Belakang Adam Shamil Personaliti TikTok Terkenal

5 Negara Yang Memilih Untuk Tidak Menggunakan Matawang Sendiri

Info Dan Sinopsis Drama Berepisod Aku Bukan Ustazah Slot Akasia TV3

Info Dan Sinopsis Drama Berepisod Bercakap Dengan Jun Slot DramaVaganza Astro Ria


Fiersa Besari April Chord

Moh Assures To Disclose Aefi Data Of Covid Vaccines

A Glimpse Into Malaysia S High Profile Graft Cases And Macc S Success Rate In Netting The Sharks

Sanusi Sesuai Semua Suasana

Infinix Memperkenalkan Gt 20 Pro Telefon Pintar Dual Chip Gaming Beast Ke Malaysia

Filem Ngesot