Share

Economics in the time of corona

accreditation
Johan Fourie is associate professor in economics at Stellenbosch University.
Johan Fourie is associate professor in economics at Stellenbosch University.

There is little doubt that the world is headed towards a corona-induced recession. We are rich because we live interdependent lives, specialising in the things we do best and trading away our surpluses.

When that trade is prohibited - when we cannot but the things we do not produce ourselves - we return to the independent but impoverished worlds our ancestors inhabited.

Just how much poorer we will be after the crisis is difficult to estimate. There are many factors at play. Premature deaths reduce the size of the labour force, and illness lowers productivity.

Resources that could have been used productively will now flow to treatment and control measures. Attempts to reduce the spread of the disease, like travel bans and self-isolation, can further disrupt economic activity.

Some industries will feel the effects immediately, like logistics and tourism, but all will eventually suffer, from mining to manufacturing to insurance. It is not only the costs of lost income that matters, though.

The intrinsic value of lives prematurely lost – as economists unemotionally label the human suffering attached to losing loved ones – may be far greater than a mere decline inGDP.

Put differently: People care much more about the psychological pain and anxiety of pandemics than they care about a fall in their standard of living. 

That is the argument of three American economists – Victoria Fan, Dean Jamison and Lawrence Summers – in a 2016 NBER Working Paper. They first review previous estimates of the economic costs of pandemics, all of them focusing only on its lost income.

One estimate comes from the World Bank. Using the 1918 Spanish flu as a baseline, the bank estimates that in the case of such a severe pandemic, global GDP could fall by 5%.

More than half of that would be because of the disruptive effects of avoiding infection. Other scholars have estimated a similar ‘ultra’-bad scenario that would cut gross national income by 12% worldwide, and for some developing countries by up to 50%.

But Covid-19 is not the Spanish flu.Pandemics can range from the mild to the extreme. The Global Health Report 2035introduced the term ‘standard mortality unit’(SMU) to convey a mortality rate of 10-4: if the world population is 8bn, then an SMU of1 would imply 800 000 pandemic-related deaths.

A mild pandemic would be between 1 and 10 SMU, with severe pandemics registering 10 or more SMU. The 1957 pandemic – with1m pandemic-related deaths in a world population of 2.8bn – had an SMU of 3.

The 1918 Spanish flu, which killed an estimated 40m people in a global population of 1.8bn – had a shockingly high SMU of 220. Over the last 300 years, the world has experienced around 15 pandemics, all of them, bar 1918, with SMUs of less than 10.

The authors calculate that one could reasonably expect a pandemic to cause about 720 000 excess deaths – although there is much uncertainty around this number. This might not seem like such a high cost – given the number of annual deaths from cancers (8m) or strokes (6m).

But the authors argue that once intrinsic value is added to the loss of income that a pandemic, even a 'mild' one of only 720 000 excess deaths, would cause, it is significant: "The expected annual inclusive cost that results for the world is $570bn or 0.7% of global income (in 2015 figures).

In comparison, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimates the likely cost of global warming to fall in the range 0.2% to 2% of global income annually."

The point is that, when the authors wrotethe paper in 2016, they already warned us that the cost of a pandemic could be equivalent to that of climate change. They also proposed ways to mitigate the risks of severe pandemics.

This included from spending on research and development towards a universal flu vaccine to implementing global programmes to immunise humans, swine and birds against seasonal flu.

And while some of this was done, the authors note that “it is our sense that given this paper’s cost estimates for pandemic risk, the economic benefits of further investments are likely to substantially exceed their costs”.

But we can do little about the past; the best we can do is to think about the most appropriate remedial action now. It’s clear that the priority is to prevent the virus from spreading rapidly.

That is the reason for the various quarantines and lockdowns and flight bans. But what can governments do to mitigate against the recession that will inevitably follow from the blockade?

Expansionary monetary and fiscal policy is, of course, the first course of action that comes to mind. At the remarkably low interest rates that are now the norm in many countries, it is perhaps time to borrow and build new infrastructure.

Italy has already announced several aid programmes to support struggling households.In South Africa, though, there is little room to borrow more.

Even if we were lucky and the disease were not to affect us severely, in a world where the US, Europe and China sneezes (to use a bad pun), SA is bound to suffer as a result. Our only recourse is to convince local enterprises to borrow and invest in the country.

And the only way to do that is to show a credible commitment to sound macro- and microeconomic policies that, once the global economy recovers, will return SA to the growth path it has avoided for the last decade.

This article originally appeared in the 2 April edition of finweek. Buy and download the magazine here or subscribe to our newsletter here.

We live in a world where facts and fiction get blurred
Who we choose to trust can have a profound impact on our lives. Join thousands of devoted South Africans who look to News24 to bring them news they can trust every day. As we celebrate 25 years, become a News24 subscriber as we strive to keep you informed, inspired and empowered.
Join News24 today
heading
description
username
Show Comments ()
Rand - Dollar
19.20
-0.1%
Rand - Pound
23.75
-0.2%
Rand - Euro
20.52
-0.3%
Rand - Aus dollar
12.40
-0.2%
Rand - Yen
0.12
-0.1%
Platinum
923.40
-0.8%
Palladium
1,008.50
-0.7%
Gold
2,309.88
-0.7%
Silver
26.94
-0.9%
Brent Crude
87.00
-0.3%
Top 40
67,996
+0.7%
All Share
74,012
+0.6%
Resource 10
59,729
-2.0%
Industrial 25
102,932
+1.9%
Financial 15
15,795
+1.2%
All JSE data delayed by at least 15 minutes Iress logo
Company Snapshot
Editorial feedback and complaints

Contact the public editor with feedback for our journalists, complaints, queries or suggestions about articles on News24.

LEARN MORE
Government tenders

Find public sector tender opportunities in South Africa here.

Government tenders
This portal provides access to information on all tenders made by all public sector organisations in all spheres of government.
Browse tenders