Coronavirus economics: the financial calamity behind COVID-19
By Dan Hadley
AS AUSTRALIANS ARGUE AND FIGHT in shopping aisles over
packets of toilet paper, other nations have focused on more serious matters in
regard to COVID-19.
Loosely referred to as ‘coronavirus’, the pandemic has
spread to almost every country according to the World Health Organization
(WHO).
Originating in Wuhan, China, it seems the virus will
inevitably reach every corner of the world.
At the time of publishing this article, the coronavirus has
officially infected nearly 170,000 people globally and killed over 6,500.
In the face of government controls, lockdowns, isolate on and blockades, markets and economies have met a calamity that may have a fallout greater than the 2009 Global Financial Crisi
Markets falling…
Shares across all markets have taken a dive in the wake of
WHO announcements and ever-growing statistical reports of coronavirus
spreading. The Dow Jones has taken a 9.5 percent hit over two months since
January 2020 with the Nikkei down 10.6 percdent and the FTSE down 14.6 percent
(Bloomberg).
Market confidence continues to fall, and investors are
clearly very conservative in the face of mass reductions in economic activity
and spending.
Bloomberg indicated last week that the coronavirus may cost
the global economy up to $2.7 trillion USD equivalent.
[Editor's note: March 16 saw the largest single day
drop in the value of the Australian Stock Market since the crash of 1987: The
All Ordinaries dropped 9.5 percent and the ASX 200 dropped 9.7 percent for a
day of overall losses in the A$165 billion range. Later in the day in New
York, the industrials-heavy Dow Jones index dropped 2,998 points – 12.9 percent
– in what has been described as its day of heaviest falls since the 1987 Black
Monday crash. The S&P 500 dropped by 12 percent and the tech-stock Nasdaq
fell 12.3 percent.
[According to the US CBS News, more than 3,700 people have
now tested positive for the new COVID-19 disease in the US and, as of March 16,
74 had died. CBS said globally, the death toll was just over 6,500 on
Monday. The previous weekend had seen a spike in fatalities in European nations
grappling with aggressive outbreaks. More than 170,000 people had caught the
virus around the world, almost half had already recovered, and yet the vast
majority of cases remain mild medically.].
Market growth down significantly…
Projections for 2020 market growth are already well down
compared with 2019 figures. Expected OECD economic growth forecast sees a
reduction from nearly 3 percent in 2019 down to 2.4 percent with some countries
seeing a greater projected reduction, particularly Japan, Italy, Germany and
the UK.
These countries are looking at a reduction of 50 percent or
more in projected year on year growth and this has the capacity to stall those
economies.
Not forgetting the lives that have been lost and those
deaths that are sure to come, the coronavirus has the potential to be the
biggest economic meteor to hit Earth in recorded economic history.
Global travel down, airlines struggling and tourism
dropping …
The international and domestic travel sector comes with
immense overheads.
Reductions in travel, bought on by the fear factor and
travel restrictions, means overall demand is down and tourism has ground to a
halt in many tourist hot spots throughout the world.
This is also heightened by the number of travel-bans now in
effect globally with more likely to follow.
Not just limited to China or Asia, this reduction is having
an effect on both large companies as well as millions of small business
providers within this sector.
Many nations rely heavily on tourism to maintain adequate
income and GDP and this reduction may equate to billions of dollars for
markets.
Factories in China grind to a halt, clearing pollution …
One of the few good things to come out of the coronavirus
in China is the massive reduction in pollution.
With factories closed pending coronavirus containment and
minimal numbers of cars on streets, the skies have begun to clear.
Unfortunately, this shutdown of production is having a
major impact on the Chinese economy as well as the global market.
Importers of Chinese made goods are struggling to source
adequate stock in many instances and, as millions go into containment, China
itself is not importing foreign made goods. This will have an extensive flow-on
effect to other economies and sectors.
The strain on health systems globally …
Hospitals in Wuhan are well known to be full and bursting
at the seams. Health professionals work round the clock to help those infected.
Similar scenes are arising in Italy as well as other places
and even those countries with minimal infection numbers have begun to mobilize
health teams and resources.
This is costly and national budgets will be thrown out of
whack, even in the face of the impact we have seen today.
Australia’s response …
Prime Minister Scott Morrison recently addressed the public
at the AFR Summit in Sydney with respect to the coronavirus issue.
With a stimulus and support package announced so far and
expected to be worth in excess of A$17.6 billion, the Australian Government is
proceeding seriously.
There is already talk less than a week after that
announcement that the Federal Government is prepared to spend more on resolving
this crisis than it did during the GFC: potentially more than A$50 billion.
"When the economy bounces back, our budget will also
bounce back. The stronger the recovery, the stronger the economy, the stronger
the budget,” Mr Morrison said.
The Prime Minister went further to indicate the importance
the Federal Government was placing on the safety and wealthfare of Australians.

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