Global economic recession not as deep as expected in 2020: OECD

-Predicts global GDP to shrink by 4.5% in 2020

Foreign Desk Report

PARIS: Economic dynamism of China and the United States, as well as the stimulus of governments to cushion the coronavirus pandemic’s economic fallout would help to limit global growth contraction in 2020, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said on Wednesday.
The Paris-based organization expected in its interim outlook report that the global gross domestic product (GDP) would shrink by 4.5 percent this year before rebounding by 5 percent in 2021. These projections represented an improvement of 1.5 percentage points for 2020 and a cut of 0.2 percentage points for next year, compared with the OECD’s last estimates in June.
“The forecasts are less negative due primarily to better than expected outcomes for China and the United States in the first half of this year and a response by governments on a massive scale,” the OECD said. The easing of containment measures and the initial re-opening of businesses had also contributed to faster recovery, it added, noting that new restrictions being imposed in some countries to tackle the resurgence of the virus would likely slow the growth pace. In its outlook, the OECD projected 1.8 percent growth in China this year.
However, “prospects for an inclusive, resilient and sustainable economic growth will depend on a range of factors including the likelihood of new outbreaks of the virus, how well individuals observe health measures and restrictions, consumer and business confidence, and the extent to which government support to maintain jobs,” the OECD stated in the report.