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G L O B A L E C O N O M I C P R O S P E C T S | J A N U A R Y 2 0 2 1
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amplify financial stress. The growing role of
nonbank financial companies adds further
uncertainty about financial sector dynamics, as
these companies are more opaque than
conventional
banks
and
may
react
in
unpredictable ways during periods of stress (ESRB
2019).
Recessions that feature financial crises are
significantly deeper and longer than recessions that
do not (figure 1.16.D). Against this backdrop,
widespread financial crises, combined with a
prolonged pandemic and delayed vaccination,
could result in a double-dip global recession, with
a further contraction in activity this year, as
illustrated by the severe downside scenario
presented in box 1.4.
Greater long-term damage from the pandemic
Both recessions and epidemics can have lasting
negative effects on the growth of affected countries
through a variety of channels (figure 1.17.A; Arthi
and Parman 2020; Dieppe 2020). These events
can bankrupt otherwise viable firms, keep workers
from jobs, damage financial systems, and increase
debt burdens. Epidemics also lead to lost
schooling and worse health outcomes. COVID-19
is expected to cause a significant drop in potential
output growth relative to pre-pandemic trends
(figure 1.17.B; chapter 3). The fact that the
ongoing pandemic and ensuing global recession
have been more widespread, more severe, and
more long-lasting than any of the previous
episodes over the past eight decades raises the
possibility of even more significant economic
damage (Chudik et al. 2020). The very severity of
the shock may cause behavioral changes—a
persistent increase in people’s assessment of the
probability of an extreme negative shock would
reduce the return on investment and result in a
smaller stock of capital (Kozlowski, Veldkamp,
and Venkateswaran 2020).
The risk of greater long-term damage becomes
more likely if the pandemic lasts longer than
expected and cannot be brought fully under
control, if infections cause severe chronic health
effects, or if waning policy support impedes a
meaningful recovery. Costly reconfigurations of
production could cause some economies to reach
supply constraints earlier than expected, which
could contribute to an earlier-than-expected
resurgence in inflation. If monetary stimulus is
withdrawn as a result, high debt levels would raise
the risk of financial crises.
The debt accumulated during the pandemic will
represent a heavy burden for some borrowers for a
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