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NEW YORK: As the US presidential election draws near, the conflict between America and China will escalate, impairing global trade which is “extremely important” for emerging markets like India and Brazil that are re-opening amid COVID-19 pandemic, former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan has said.
Cautioning that there will be “deeply damaged firms” in the economy, Rajan said the post-pandemic recovery has to be accompanied by a process of repair.
“There’s going to be enormous bankruptcies in the United States certainly and quite possibly in Europe also as we repair the economy, reallocate resources, restructure capital structures,” he said on Thursday at the PanIIT USA virtual conference titled ‘The New Global Economic Norm: Post CoVID-19’.
“Certainly as we get closer to the US election, the conflict between the US and China is going to increase and that impairs global trade, which…is going to be extremely important going forward, especially for emerging markets like India, Brazil, Mexico, which are going to be significantly impaired by the virus and need some source of demand to pull them out as they start opening up again,” he said.
Former chairperson of the State Bank of India and Salesforce India CEO Arundhati Bhattacharya also addressed the event.
“Global trade is going to be an important factor if they can jump on to it, whether it’s trade in goods and services or trade in digital services, it’s going to be very important and our countries desperately need an open world,” Rajan said.
Rajan, an IIT Delhi graduate and the Katherine Dusak Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at University of Chicago Booth School of Business, said that containment of the coronavirus in countries like the US and India has not happened despite lockdowns, while in some countries containment has been a 2-2.5 month process and virus cases have been brought down to the single digits leading to re-openings.
“There are countries, of course the United States being a prime example, but also India as well as Brazil, Mexico where the containment has not happened despite lockdowns, despite enormous costs. As a result, the cost of the virus is going to be significantly greater than for the countries that have been successful,” he said.
Rajan said that for countries like India and the US that are still battling the virus, the main issue right now is to contain the virus, even as he asserted that “unfortunately the spread has become significant enough that containment is going to be very difficult”.
“This creates an enormous amount of uncertainty because businesses don’t know whether there’ll be fresh lockdowns and how difficult they will be. Some states in the US are talking about fresh lockdowns, some states in India are talking about lockdowns and have actually sort of implemented some of those right now,” he said.
Rajan also spoke about some of the trends that may emerge post-pandemic.
“There certainly seems to be greater value to working with minds than hands, especially as we go through the pandemic,” he said.
He noted that in developed countries, 45-50 per cent of the population can work at home so that the countries can keep working even in the midst of lockdowns.
However, in poorer and developing countries and emerging markets, the number of people who can work at home is much lower, he said.
“As a result, lockdowns have been much more damaging to livelihoods, to economic progress and many in the lower middle class have slipped back into poverty in these countries. There’s a number of years that we’ve lost in terms of economic progress,” he said, adding that for going forward, there willl be more emphasis on education and digital technology.
Rajan also underlined that there will be greater automation of work processes.
“Many companies are figuring out how to do things more efficiently during this crisis and that will stay on going forward, which also means that we will have to redeploy workers, we will have to figure out how to do that more effectively and certainly re-training is part of the answer,” he said.
Rajan cautioned that corporations, households and governments will have enormous levels of debt as they move out of the pandemic and there will be a lot of focus on how to restructure and bring it down over time.
“The bad debt problems of banks then and the bad debt problems that are likely to emerge for banks across the emerging world is going to be a multiple of what it was in the past and this implies that we need to spend far more time on creating restructuring processes so that firms get back to work and production.
“If we don’t focus on the problem of repairing the capital structures of these firms, we’re going to have much slower growth, much more problems down the line. So this is something that policymakers need to think about” he said.
Customers are turning to more frugality and savings and there will be more pressure for universal good healthcare as a result of this crisis., Rajan said.
“We’ve seen the consequences of having inadequate healthcare system, not just in the United States but also in places like India,” he said.
“There’s going to be much more of a need for capable governments. We’ve seen what government incompetence can do and that has been problematic. There is going to be much more support in public for more capable governments but also more support for regulation,” he said, adding that there is probably going to be more resistance to globalisation.
Cautioning that there will be “deeply damaged firms” in the economy, Rajan said the post-pandemic recovery has to be accompanied by a process of repair.
“There’s going to be enormous bankruptcies in the United States certainly and quite possibly in Europe also as we repair the economy, reallocate resources, restructure capital structures,” he said on Thursday at the PanIIT USA virtual conference titled ‘The New Global Economic Norm: Post CoVID-19’.
“Certainly as we get closer to the US election, the conflict between the US and China is going to increase and that impairs global trade, which…is going to be extremely important going forward, especially for emerging markets like India, Brazil, Mexico, which are going to be significantly impaired by the virus and need some source of demand to pull them out as they start opening up again,” he said.
Former chairperson of the State Bank of India and Salesforce India CEO Arundhati Bhattacharya also addressed the event.
“Global trade is going to be an important factor if they can jump on to it, whether it’s trade in goods and services or trade in digital services, it’s going to be very important and our countries desperately need an open world,” Rajan said.
Rajan, an IIT Delhi graduate and the Katherine Dusak Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at University of Chicago Booth School of Business, said that containment of the coronavirus in countries like the US and India has not happened despite lockdowns, while in some countries containment has been a 2-2.5 month process and virus cases have been brought down to the single digits leading to re-openings.
“There are countries, of course the United States being a prime example, but also India as well as Brazil, Mexico where the containment has not happened despite lockdowns, despite enormous costs. As a result, the cost of the virus is going to be significantly greater than for the countries that have been successful,” he said.
Rajan said that for countries like India and the US that are still battling the virus, the main issue right now is to contain the virus, even as he asserted that “unfortunately the spread has become significant enough that containment is going to be very difficult”.
“This creates an enormous amount of uncertainty because businesses don’t know whether there’ll be fresh lockdowns and how difficult they will be. Some states in the US are talking about fresh lockdowns, some states in India are talking about lockdowns and have actually sort of implemented some of those right now,” he said.
Rajan also spoke about some of the trends that may emerge post-pandemic.
“There certainly seems to be greater value to working with minds than hands, especially as we go through the pandemic,” he said.
He noted that in developed countries, 45-50 per cent of the population can work at home so that the countries can keep working even in the midst of lockdowns.
However, in poorer and developing countries and emerging markets, the number of people who can work at home is much lower, he said.
“As a result, lockdowns have been much more damaging to livelihoods, to economic progress and many in the lower middle class have slipped back into poverty in these countries. There’s a number of years that we’ve lost in terms of economic progress,” he said, adding that for going forward, there willl be more emphasis on education and digital technology.
Rajan also underlined that there will be greater automation of work processes.
“Many companies are figuring out how to do things more efficiently during this crisis and that will stay on going forward, which also means that we will have to redeploy workers, we will have to figure out how to do that more effectively and certainly re-training is part of the answer,” he said.
Rajan cautioned that corporations, households and governments will have enormous levels of debt as they move out of the pandemic and there will be a lot of focus on how to restructure and bring it down over time.
“The bad debt problems of banks then and the bad debt problems that are likely to emerge for banks across the emerging world is going to be a multiple of what it was in the past and this implies that we need to spend far more time on creating restructuring processes so that firms get back to work and production.
“If we don’t focus on the problem of repairing the capital structures of these firms, we’re going to have much slower growth, much more problems down the line. So this is something that policymakers need to think about” he said.
Customers are turning to more frugality and savings and there will be more pressure for universal good healthcare as a result of this crisis., Rajan said.
“We’ve seen the consequences of having inadequate healthcare system, not just in the United States but also in places like India,” he said.
“There’s going to be much more of a need for capable governments. We’ve seen what government incompetence can do and that has been problematic. There is going to be much more support in public for more capable governments but also more support for regulation,” he said, adding that there is probably going to be more resistance to globalisation.
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