The economic
growth is expected to fall to a range between 1.5 per cent and 2.8 per cent in
the current fiscal year 2019-20 reflecting lower remittances, trade and
tourism, and broader disruptions caused by the coronavirus outbreak, according
to the World Bank.
The
government – despite lowering the budget during the mid-term budgetary review –
was still targeting to achieve 8.5 per cent economic growth, despite its failure
in capital budget spending, and meeting the revenue mobilisation target. The
corona pandemic has become a face saver to the majority government led by Prime
Minister KP Sharma Oli that has not only failed to expedite economic growth but
also create business environment in the country.
Likewise, the
Asian Development Bank (ADB) – last week – also slashed its own growth forecast
for Nepal to 5.3 per cent for the current fiscal year, a sharp decrease from
last year's 7.1 per cent growth.
Releasing
its twice-a-year-regional update, the Washington-based multilateral development
partner said that the prolonged outbreak of Covid-19 would impact growth
significantly with a further deceleration or contraction in services and
industrial production. “Economic growth during fiscal year 2020-21 is also
likely to remain subdued due to the lingering effects of the pandemic with some
recovery expected in the fiscal year 2021-22,” the report reads, adding that the
Covid-19 shock will likely reinforce inequality in South Asia. “Nepal’s economy
will grow by 1.4 per cent to 2.9 per cent in the fiscal year 2020-21, followed
by 2.7 per cent to 3.6 per cent in the fiscal year 2021-22.”
According
to World Bank country manager for Nepal Faris Hadad-Zervos, the World Bank is closely
monitoring how the Covid-19 pandemic is evolving across Nepal. “Our immediate
priority is to coordinate our action with the government, private sector and
international development partners to ensure that health supplies and equipment
are readily available and that a comprehensive recovery package is in place to
support the poor and most vulnerable," he said.
The impact
of the pandemic will hit low-income people hard, especially informal workers in
the hospitality, retail trade, and transport sectors who have limited or no
access to healthcare or social safety nets.
“As played
out across the region, the sudden and large-scale loss of low paid work has
driven a mass exodus of migrant workers from cities to rural areas, spiking
fear that many of them will fall back into poverty,” the report reads, adding that
there are no signs yet of widespread food shortages but a protracted Covid-19
crisis may threaten food security, especially for the most vulnerable.
In the
short term, the report recommends preparing weak healthcare systems for greater
Covid-19 impacts, as well as providing safety nets and securing access to food,
medical supplies, and necessities for the most vulnerable. The report calls for
establishing temporary work programmes for unemployed migrant workers, enacting
debt relief measures for businesses and individuals, and easing inter-regional
customs clearance to speed up import and export of essential goods, to minimise
short-term economic pain.
Amid the
mounting human toll and global economic fallout triggered by the Covid-19
pandemic, South Asian governments must ramp up action to curb the health
emergency, protect their people, especially the poorest and most vulnerable,
and set the stage now for fast economic recovery, the World Bank said.
In its
South Asia Economic Focus, the WB anticipated a sharp economic slump in each of
the region’s eight countries, caused by halting economic activity, collapsing
trade, and greater stress in the financial and banking sectors.
In this
fast-changing and uncertain context, the report has presented a range forecast,
estimating that regional growth will fall to a range between 1.8 and 2.8 per cent
in the current fiscal year 2019-20, down from 6.3 per cent projected six months
ago. “That would be the region’s worst performance in the last 40 years, with
temporary contractions in all South Asian countries,” it reads. In case of
prolonged and broad national lockdowns, the report warns of a worst-case
scenario in which the entire region would experience a negative growth rate
this year.
The deteriorated
forecast will linger in the fiscal year 2020-21, with growth projected to hover
between 3.1 per cent and 4 per cent, down from the previous 6.7 per cent
estimate.
Once
lockdown restrictions are loosened, South Asian governments should adopt
expansionary fiscal policies combined with monetary stimulus to keep credit
flowing in their economies, the report suggests, adding that many South Asian
countries have limited fiscal space, these policies should target people worst
hit by the freeze on economic activity. The report urges governments to adopt temporary
spending measures and coordinate with international financial partners to avoid
unsustainable long-term debt levels and fiscal deficits.
“After
tackling the immediate Covid-19 threat, South Asian countries must keep their
sovereign debt sustainable through fiscal prudence and debt relief
initiatives,” said World Bank chief economist for the South Asia Region Hans
Timmer. “And looking beyond the present crisis, lie great opportunities to
expand digital technologies for payment systems and distant learning to unlock
remote areas in South Asia.”
Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, economic circumstances within countries and regions are fluid
and change on a day-by-day basis, and the World Bank Group is taking broad,
fast action to help developing countries strengthen their pandemic response,
increase disease surveillance, improve public health interventions, and help
the private sector continue to operate and sustain jobs, the press release
reads, adding that it is deploying up to $160 billion in financial support over
the next 15 months to help countries protect the poor and vulnerable, support
businesses, and bolster economic recovery.
Nepal has
been under lockdown since March 24, effectively shutting down the entire
country.
The economy has lost more
than Rs 100 billion in Chaitra (mid-March to mid-April) alone.
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