Part 2 - Economic Performance 2017 - 2020
51
COVID-19 Impacts on Global
Economy
During the period March 2020 – November
2021 (and continuing), the global economy
has undergone drastic changes due to the
ramifications of Covid-19 containment
measures, which have been taken by all
countries without exception in order to save
societies from the pandemic, and to enhance
the capacity of health facilities to receive all
infected cases. Given that there is no trade-
off between protecting lives and protecting
economies, many governments around the
world adopted economic stimulus policies to
deal with the repercussions of the pandemic
on both health and the economy.
Based
on
developments
in
the
implementation of economic policies at the
global level, particularly by the superpowers,
several research centres, institutions and
international banks routinely amend their
assumptions when making their periodic
forecasts. It is clear from Table (2-3) that the
International
Monetary
Fund
(IMF),
according to the various editions of its World
Economic Outlook report (WEO) during the
same period, amended its estimates of the Y-
o-Y rate of change of economic growth for the
year 2020 several times. Initially, in October
2019, the WEO estimated that the global
economy can be expected to grow by about
3.4%. Then, with the beginning of the
emergence of the Sars-CoV-2 (Covid-19)
virus in China and its subsequent spread to
all countries of the world, the IMF estimated
in the April 2020 WEO that the global
economy would decline by about 3%. Yet, as
the global crisis intensified, it was estimated
in the October 2020 WEO to decline to
negative 4.4%. However, with the
improvement of the economies of the United
States and China during Quarter Four (Q4) of
2020, and according to estimates for January
2021, the decline rose slightly to become
negative 3.5%.
Furthermore, considering the progress that
the world achieved in confronting the
consequences of Covid-19 during Q1 of
2021, much enhanced by the production of
Covid-19 vaccines and the roll-out of
vaccination campaigns in all countries, the
IMF again modified some of its estimates for
the global economic performance for 2020 in
the April 2021 WEO, to arrive at a measure
of the global economic decline at negative
3.3%, before stabilizing in its July 2021
edition at negative 3.2% and then in its
October 2021 edition at negative 3.1%
Similarly, the
IMF has
several times
revised its
estimates of
the
economies of
the Middle
East countries
and the Gulf
Cooperation
Council
countries for
2020,
including the
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