Time to Reset
Expectations for World Economy With Virus Untamed
By Enda Curran, Suzi Ring, and Anchalee Worrachate
October 25, 2020, 5:00 AM GMT
Investors banking on a coronavirus vaccine to save the world
economy in 2021 need to temper their ambitions as scientists increasingly warn
of a long and difficult road ahead.
While drug companies are making progress in the quest to
find a cure for a disease that triggered the worst recession since the Great
Depression, questions
remain about how effective the first wave of vaccines would be, how easy they
will be to distribute to more than 7 billion people and then how many will
agree to take them.
The future for global growth relies on the answers to those
questions as a new wave of the pandemic means health fears and government
restrictions continue to inhibit daily life and commerce. Even when a
successful immunization system does come along, it won’t be an instant economic
panacea, says Chris Chapman, a portfolio manager at Manulife Investment, which
manages more than $660 billion.
“In terms of actually getting back to pre-Covid or trend growth,
it could take more than a year,” said Chapman. “The timing of the recovery will
be delayed, but there is still expectation of a vaccine at some point next
year.”
For decades, the world economy relied on central bankers and
finance ministers to pull it out of crisis, on the basis that if you pump the
right amount of money into an economy, a recovery will eventually follow.
This time is different, as investors look to scientists and
data from vaccine and treatment trials for signs of hope just as much as they
pore over stimulus plans coming out of Washington, Beijing or European
capitals. The longer the hunt for an effective vaccine lasts, the weaker
economic expansions will be.
To be sure, science could yet make major breakthroughs in
the near term. If even only a small proportion of the population such as
healthcare workers and the most vulnerable are immunized, that could make a big
difference to the resumption of everyday life. Savings built up by households
and businesses in 2020 could be unleashed in 2021.
Pfizer Inc. said this month it could seek emergency-use
authorization in the U.S. by late November for its vaccine with German partner
BioNTech SE. Moderna, another frontrunner in the race, is also looking at the
possibility of an emergency approval this year if it has positive interim
results next month.
Balancing Act
“There is a fair prospect that by the late spring, vaccines
will be available in quantities sufficient to protect the most vulnerable
groups,” said Neil Ferguson, an epidemiologist at Imperial College London, and
former Covid-19 adviser to the U.K. government. “But at least until then, life
will unfortunately remain a balancing act between reopening society and keeping
the virus in check.”
Scientific hiccups may slow things down too. Johnson &
Johnson paused clinical trials of its Covid-19 shot this month after a
participant fell ill, weeks after AstraZeneca Plc and the University of Oxford
stopped studies for the same reason. On Friday, both companies announced plans
to resume their U.S. trials.
Effective treatments that would also help the economic
recovery are also a mixed picture. Disappointing trial results this month for
the much-hailed drug remdesivir from Gilead Sciences Inc. showed the antiviral
treatment doesn’t save the lives of Covid-19 patients, despite U.S. President
Donald Trump extolling its benefits. Still, U.S. regulators cleared the drug
for use this week and Gilead has challenged the recent findings citing other
positive results.
While there are hopeful signs from some antibody treatments
being tested, the steroid dexamethasone is one of the only other therapeutics
showing a meaningful benefit, and is aimed at people with very severe symptoms.
Even if an effective vaccine is discovered, the logistics of
distribution will still mean disruption to work, travel and leisure will
remain, with only a small subset of the population expected to receive a shot
in the first instance anyway.
That all spells trouble for global growth, even as data in
the U.S. and euro-area are likely to show this week that it rebounded smartly
in the third quarter and didn’t collapse as much as once feared.
Long gone though is talk of a V-shaped recovery, as winter
nears in the northern hemisphere -- and with it the risk the virus spreads more
easily. Bloomberg Economics’s gauges of high-frequency data already point to a
weakening of activity in many industrial nations in October, particularly those
in Europe.
‘Very Precarious’
“The virus is creating a major element of uncertainty,”
former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Bloomberg Television last
week. “Forecasting it is very precarious.”
Underscoring the pressure for an end to the pandemic is the
knowledge economic scars are already forming. Among them: lost jobs, record
debts, corporate bankruptcies, atrophying skills, missed investment,
deglobalization, frayed mental health and rising inequality.
A recent study declared the U.S. economy alone will witness
“large, persistent adverse effects” in the long term that outweigh the
short-term hit in part because the virus means greater unease among the public.
“This did not start as a financial crisis but it is morphing
into a major economic crisis, with very serious financial consequences,” World
Bank Chief Economist Carmen Reinhart told Bloomberg Television. “There’s a long
road ahead.”
Even in those parts of the world where the virus has been
largely contained, consumers remain cautious. Chinese retail sales have only just begun to accelerate even
though the most severe limits on movement were lifted months ago.
There is also the question of re-infection. Scientists have found it’s possible to get Covid-19
more than once, with a handful of confirmed cases globally. That presents
another obstacle, which a vaccine may only partially solve.
There’s a high chance the coronavirus, like flu, could require
regular shots to keep it at bay, meaning the virus could cast an even
longer arc than already expected, cautioned Graham Medley, a professor of
infectious disease modeling at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical
Medicine, and member of the U.K. government’s Covid-19 advisory panel.
“If
second and third infections are as infectious as the first infection, and the
first generation of vaccines is not very efficacious, then it’s possible that
Covid-19 will continue to be a major aspect of life into 2022,” he said.
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