A little over ten
years ago I was approached by some health experts who wanted to look
at the economic effects of a influenza pandemic. They needed someone
with a macroeconomic model to look at the general equilibrium
impacts. In the 1990s I had led a small team that constructed
a model called COMPACT, and these health experts and I completed a
paper that was subsequently published
in Health Economics. We reference to other studies that had been done
earlier in that paper.
The current
coronavirus outbreak will have different characteristics to the
pandemic we studied, and hopefully it will not become a pandemic at
all. (In terms of mortality it seems to be somewhere in between the
‘base case’ and ‘severe case’ we looked at in our work.) But
I think there were some general lessons from the exercise we did that
will be relevant if this particular coronavirus does become a global
pandemic. One proviso is that a key assumption we made about the pandemic is that it was
mainly a 3 month affair, and obviously what I have to say is
dependent on it being short-lived.
It is worth saying at the start that the bottom line of all this for me is that the economics are secondary to the health consequences for any pandemic that has a significant fatality rate (as coronavirus so far appears to have). The economics are important in their own right and as a warning to avoid drastic measures that do not influence the number of deaths, but beyond that there is no meaningful trade-off between preventing deaths and losing some percent of GDP for less than half the year.
Let me start with
the least important impact from an economic point of view, and that
is the fall in production due to workers taking more time off sick.
It is least important in part because firms have ways of compensating
for this, particularly if illness is spread over the quarter. For
example those who have been sick and come back to work can work
overtime. This will raise costs and might lead to some temporary
inflation, but the central bank should ignore this.
This ‘direct’
impact of the pandemic will reduce GDP in that quarter by a few
percentage points. The precise number will depend on what proportion
of the population that get sick, on what the fatality rate in the UK turns
out to be, and how many people miss work in an attempt not to get the
disease. The impact on GDP for the whole year following the pandemic
is much less at around 1% or 2%, partly because output after the
pandemic quarter is higher as firms replenish diminished stocks and
meet postponed demand.
All this assumes
schools do not close once the pandemic takes hold. School closures
can amplify the reduction in labour supply if some workers are forced
to take time off to look after children. On the basis of the
assumptions we made, if schools close for around 4 weeks that can
multiply the GDP impacts above by as much as a factor of 3, and if
they close for a whole quarter by twice that. If that seems large,
remember nationwide school closures impact everyone with children and
not just those with the disease.
But even with all
schools closed for 3 months and many people avoiding work when they
were not sick, the largest impact we got for GDP loss over a year was
less than 5%. That is a one quarter very severe recession, but there
is no reason why the economy cannot bounce back to full strength once
the pandemic is over. Unlike a normal recession, information on the
cause of the output loss, and therefore when it should end, is clear.
All this assumes
that consumers who have not yet got the disease do not alter their
behaviour. For a pandemic that spreads gradually this seems unlikely.
The most important lesson I learnt from doing this study is that the
pandemic need not just be a supply shock. It can also be a demand
shock that can hit specific sectors very hard, depending on how
consumers behave. This is because a lot of our consumption nowadays
can be called social, by which I mean doing things that bring you
into contact with other people. Things like going to the pub, to
restaurants, to football matches or travel. Other sectors that
provide consumption services that involve personal contact (e.g
haircuts) and can easily be postponed may also be hit.
If people start
worrying about getting the disease sufficiently to cut back on this
social consumption, the economic impact will be more severe than any
numbers discussed so far. One reason it is severe is that it is
partly a permanent loss. Maybe you will have a few more meals out
once the pandemic is over to make up for what you missed when you
stayed home, but there is likely to be a net fall in your consumption
of meals out over the year. What I realised when I did the analysis
was just how much of our consumption was social.
This is why the
biggest impacts on GDP occur when we have people reducing their
social consumption in an effort not to get the disease. However falls
in social consumption do not scale up all scenarios by the same
amount, for the simple reason that supply and demand are
complimentary. If school closures and people taking more time off
work increase the size of the supply shock, the demand shock has less
scope to do damage. The largest fall in annual GDP in all the
variants we looked at was 6%.
Could conventional
monetary or fiscal policy offset the fall in social consumption? Only
partially, because the drop in consumption is focused on specific
sectors. What is more important, and what we didn’t explore in the
exercise, is what would happen if the banks failed to provide
bridging finance for the firms having to deal with a sudden fall in
demand. The banks may judge that some businesses that are already
indebted may not be able to cope with any additional short term
loans, leading to business closures during the pandemic.
It is in this light
that we should view the collapse of stock markets around the world.
In macroeconomic terms this is a one-off shock, so Martin Sandbu is
right
that the recent stock market reaction looks overblown. But if many
businesses are at financial risk from the temporary drop in social
consumption, that implies a rise in the equity risk premia,
which helps account for the size of the stock market collapse we have
seen. (I say 'helps' deliberately, as much of the impact will be on smaller businesses that do not find their way into the main stock market indices.)
If I was running the
central bank or government, I would have already started having
conversations with banks about not forcing firms into bankruptcy
during any pandemic.
But economics can also influence health outcomes, and not just in terms of NHS resources.
For a minority of self employed workers there will be no sick-pay and
those without a financial cushion will be put under stress. One of
the concerns as far as the spread of the pandemic is concerned is
that workers will not be able to afford to self-isolate if they have
the disease. So if I was in government I would be thinking of setting
up something like a sick-leave fund that such workers could apply to
if they get coronavirus symptoms.
The government also
needs to think about keeping public services and utilities running
when workers in those services start falling ill. In fact there are a
whole host of things the government should now be doing to prepare
for a pandemic. It is at times like these that we really need
governments to act fast and think ahead. Do we
in the UK, and
US citizens, have confidence that the government will do what is
required? One lesson of coronavirus may be never put into power politicians that have a habit of ignoring experts.
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