Credit insurance specialist, Coface has predicted an uneven recovery form the global pandemic across countries, sectors of activity, and income levels in its latest quarterly report.
The company says that although the performance of China and other Asian economies is boosting global growth, the main mature economies will not return to their pre-crisis GDP levels this year. This rise in inequality, along with public dissatisfaction with the government’s handling of the pandemic in many countries, is conducive to the emergence of more frequent potential protests and violence this year.
A year after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, and the biggest global recession since the end of the Second World War, Coface estimates that world growth could reach 4.3% on average in 2021, while world trade would increase by 6.7% in volume (after -5.2% in 2020). These projections assume that the major mature economies are able to vaccinate at least 60% of their population by the summer. Indeed, the resulting herd immunity could mark the end of stop-go cycles, i.e., successive episodes of containment that are harmful to economic activity.
The drop in business failures in 2020 in all regions of the world (-12% worldwide, -22% in the eurozone, -19% in Asia-Pacific, and -3% in North America), can be attributed to government support plans, the continuation of which will allow many businesses to survive this year.
Nevertheless, despite the impact of these various government support plans, Coface anticipates that the shock observed in 2020 will lead to an increase in insolvencies in 2022, notably in Spain (16%, compared to 2019), France (13%), Italy (9%), and Germany (6%).
The latest quarterly Coface Barometer in summary;