COVID-19 and the GLOBAL LIBRARIES
EXPRESSIONS FROM ECLAC, IFLA AND ACURIL
KEY MESSAGES
Before the pandemic, growth in Latin America and the Caribbean was at its weakest in decades and policy space was limited.
The COVID-19 pandemic has hit Latin America and the Caribbean in a period of economic weakness and macroeconomic vulnerability. In the decade following the global financial crisis (2010–2019), regional GDP growth fell from 6% to 0.2%.
Moreover, growth in the 2014–2019 period was the lowest level recorded since the 1950s (0.4%) (see figure 1 and the first report of this series).
As the pandemic spreads across the region, its nature as a health, economic and social crisis is increasingly evident. The extent and duration of its effects, although still too uncertain to quantify, are becoming clearer. It will result in the region’s worst economic and social crisis in decades, with damaging effects on employment, the fight against poverty and the reduction of inequality.
The aim of this second Special Report is to quantify the economic impact of the pandemic in the short and medium term. With regard to the short term —during the course of 2020— estimates shed light on the dynamics of production, employment, poverty and income distribution, based on data available at 17 April 2020, for all the subregions of Latin America and the Caribbean and many of their economies.
The report also provides details of the main macroeconomic policy measures to tackle the effects of the pandemic that have been announced to date.
Quantifying the decline in economic activity enables authorities to determine the magnitude of the effort required for a return to normal. However, this return to normal will not and should not mean going back to the way things were before the pandemic. The medium-term vision that concludes this report describes the structural changes in the organization of production that are already under way and are expected to gather pace.
There will also be impacts —in some cases irreversible— on the labour structure, employment and well-being.
Quantitative estimates for the short term, combined with forecasts of the main qualitative changes in the medium term, will shape what will become a new normal.
KEY ITEMS
1. Before COVID-19, Latin America and the Caribbean was growing slowly, with limited fiscal space and increasing social conflict.
2. COVID-19 is affecting the region through domestic and external impacts: a standstill in domestic economic activity coupled with a deep recession in the world economy.
3. The repercussions will cause the most severe recession in the region since 1914 and 1930. GDP of Latin America and the Caribbean to shrink by more than 5% in 2020.
4. The slump in international trade will exacerbate the recession.
5. Unemployment is expected to rise sharply, increasing poverty and inequality.
6. The countries of the region have announced significant measures, which must be strengthened and require greater funding.
7. There is an urgent need for access to low-cost financial resources, based on flexible support from multilateral financial bodies, debt service relief and, possibly, debt forgiveness.
8. The region’s model of participation in international markets and options for reactivation need to be reconsidered in light of the structural changes that will occur in globalization and in the world following COVID-19.
This document is based on data as at 17 April 2020..
https://repositorio.cepal.org/bitstream/handle/11362/45477/1/S2000285_en.pdfEXPRESSIONS FROM IFLA
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