By Dove Direct on Tuesday, 13 July 2021
Category: Content Marketing

The Economic Impact of Covid-19

Welcome to the Dove Direct Print and Marketing Blog. Today's post, "The Economic Impact of Covid-19," takes a look at the resulting 2020 economic impact and the lasting effect on our well-being in 2021.  For starters, global fiscal support reached approximately $16 trillion (around 15 percent of global GDP) in 2020.  In review, the Covid-19 pandemic unleashed a budgetary and health response with unprecedented speed and magnitude.  We've often tossed around the term "preexisting conditions" concerning health status in this country.  However, the term preexisting conditions can also apply across a broad range of scenarios.  In this case, the unmitigated shock to the economic system ran into multiple preexisting conditions or procedures.  According to the Brookings Institute, the increased level of shock that continues to be most prominent include:


Fiscal space: The capacity to support households and firms largely depends on access to international financial markets.

State Capacity: Fast and efficient implementation of policies to support households and firms requires a substantial state capacity and well-developed tax and transfer infrastructure.

Labor Market Structure: A large share of informal workers facing significant frictions to adopt remote working, and high levels of poverty and inequality, deepen the deleterious impact of the crisis.

That's a myriad of preexisting circumstances to deal with on a global scale.


Our Quote of the Day: 
"If you set your goals ridiculously high and it's a failure, you will fail above everyone else's success."
—James Cameron

Impact Forecast

Economists predict that the global economy will most likely recover this year; however, the GDP level by the end of 2021, including advanced, emerging market, and developing economies (EMDE - Emerging and Developing Europe), remains below the pre-virus baseline per forecasts.
  The IMF (2021) forecasts that in 2024 the World GDP will be 3 percent (6 percent for low-income countries, (LICs) below the no-Covid situation.  This, of course, now includes the Delta Variant, which is rapidly spreading in the US.  Lastly, the speed and recovery status will be the crucible that sways the width and breadth of the recovery, which exponentially reflects global governments' capacity to acquire and distribute the vaccines.


Losers and Winners

The Harvard Business Review states that "Fiscal stimulus was both enormous and necessary when the Covid crisis hit last year, and it successfully prevented the structural damage that weighs down recoveries.  But even as the economy was on a better-than-expected rebound, the Biden administration and Congress opted for an additional stimulus package in the hope of delivering a booming economy that will boost workers' fortunes in the post-Covid economy.  The downside to this stimulus bet is the risk of imbalances, such as inflation or asset bubbles, as the economy "overshoots." 

 There is no question that a remarkable recovery is afoot; however, businesses and leaders will face a political-economic question in the future.  As wages are rising and workers are claiming an economic output continuing to grow, will business organizations' profit structure succumb under increased pressure?


What Can Your Business Do?

Businesses have always focused on productivity.  However, due to the economic effects of the pandemic, productivity has reached center stage, in that growth, per se, is now critical moving the focus to produce more with existing inputs or produce the status quo with fewer inputs.  It may sound easy peasy, but in reality, it's not. This scenario is particularly true while the pandemic continues to place an enormous strain on the workforce.  However, multiple key levers can aid in sustainability.  Again, from the experts of the Harvard Business Review:


The Net-Net



As we move through the next iteration of the Covid-19 variants, it is unclear how much the Delta variant will disrupt businesses, workers, healthcare, vaccines, or the economy.  That said, productivity appears to be the critical metric that companies will need to tackle, particularly since it will be more challenging to hire new workers or replace workers.  The inflation scenario could further exacerbate the challenges we are all facing.  Focusing on productivity and leadership will best prepare organizations to weather the economic storm.  Thanks for reading "The Economic Impact of Covid 19!"


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