COVID-19 is a disease caused by a specific virus (SARS-CoV-2) and labeled in the press “coronavirus” or “novel coronavirus.”
Much about the disease is not currently known. While public health officials are still determining the medical impacts of the virus along with certain key characteristics, such as the incubation period, we believe the economic impact will in part depend on how the public reacts to the virus. Public reaction could allow the disease to spread more quickly and widely, or it could create unnecessary costs.
In 2017, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released guidelines for the prevention of “pandemic influenza.” The CDC’s recommendations for “nonpharmaceutical interventions” included:
Countries that implement similar CDC-style recommendations in relation to COVID-19 may experience less dislocation, although there may still be an economic impact. School closures and social distancing might reduce the available labor force in an area experiencing a pandemic, for example. We might then observe mild rolling economic impacts as outbreaks occur in various regions.
A severe public reaction in which local authorities or people themselves decide on extremely strict measures in a given area could create significant economic costs, particularly in regions and for industries that specialize in production that can’t be done virtually (such as manufacturing). If many countries opt for this type of response, the impact on the global economy could be quite large.
COVID-19 could affect the global economy through three channels:
These potential scenarios are purely descriptive ideas about possible paths that the disease outbreak, and the global economy, might take.