Close Menu
Straightnews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    TikTok, Snapchat settle social media addiction lawsuit ahead of trial

    January 27, 2026 --- 10:29 pm

    A’Ibom Police Arrest, Arraign Man over Illegal Firearms and Threat to Life

    January 27, 2026 --- 2:42 pm

    Court Orders FCTA Workers To Suspend Strike, Grants Injunction

    January 27, 2026 --- 2:01 pm
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • TikTok, Snapchat settle social media addiction lawsuit ahead of trial
    • A’Ibom Police Arrest, Arraign Man over Illegal Firearms and Threat to Life
    • Court Orders FCTA Workers To Suspend Strike, Grants Injunction
    • Coup Plot: 16 Officers to Face Special Court-Martial – DHQ
    • Alleged Financial Sleaze Clouds Ambassador Ayo Oke’s Appointment
    • Police Nab Three Over Masquerade Activities in Akwa Ibom
    • 25 Transformers: Rep Idem Ends Years of Darkness in Two Electricity-Starved LGAs
    • Akpabio Hails Gov Eno for peaceful and unifying leadership Disposition
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Straightnews
    • Home
    • About Us
      • About StraightNews
      • Our Philosophy
      • Editorial Board
    • News
      • Nationwide News
      • Community News
      • Regional News
        • North Central
        • North East
        • North West
        • South East
        • South South
        • South West
    • Nigeria
      • Politics
      • Economy
      • Education
      • Security
      • Energy
      • Agriculture
      • Health
      • Labour
      • Environment
      • Technology
      • Real Estate
      • Transportation
      • Judiciary
      • Electricity
    • Foreign
      • Africa
        • West Africa
        • South Africa
        • North Africa
        • East Africa
      • America
      • Asia
      • Europe
    • Social
      • Photo Gallery
      • Entertainment
      • Events
      • Fashion
      • Fitness
      • Short Stories
      • Lifestyle
      • Relationship
      • Travel
      • Specials
        • Personality Interview
        • Special Reports
        • Profile
    • Articles
      • Editorial
      • Opinion
      • Essay
    • Contact Us
    • Sports
    Straightnews
    Home»News»Aftermath Of Coronavirus Shock, Recession Looms In Some Countries- UNCTAD
    News

    Aftermath Of Coronavirus Shock, Recession Looms In Some Countries- UNCTAD

    straightnewsng.comBy straightnewsng.comMarch 15, 2020 --- 5:32 pmNo Comments4 Mins Read
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19)
    Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19)
    Share
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    By Akanimo Sampson

    The COVID-19 shock will cause a recession in some countries and depress global annual growth this year to below 2.5%, a United Nations trade agency says.

    According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the spread of the coronavirus is first and foremost a public health emergency, but it’s also a significant economic threat.

    Even if the worst is avoided, the hit to global income, compared with what forecasters had been projecting for 2020, will be capped at around the trillion-dollar mark. But could it be worse?

    UNCTAD published an analysis on March 9, that suggests why this may be the case.

    Losses of consumer and investor confidence are the most immediate signs of spreading contagion, the analysis says.

    However, a combination of asset price deflation, weaker aggregate demand, heightened debt distress and a worsening income distribution could trigger a more vicious downward spiral.

    Widespread insolvency and possibly another “Minsky moment”, a sudden, big collapse of asset values which would mark the end of the growth phase of this cycle cannot be ruled out.

    UNCTAD’s Director of Globalisation and Development Strategies, Richard Kozul-Wright, says “back in September we were anxiously scanning the horizon for possible shocks given the financial fragilities left unaddressed since the 2008 crisis and the persistent weakness in demand.

    “No one saw this coming – but the bigger story is a decade of debt, delusion and policy drift.”

    The Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s offers some parallels with the current situation, but that crisis occurred before China gave the region a much bigger global economic footprint and when the advanced economies were in reasonably good economic shape.

    This is not the case today.

    Public and private aggregate debt levels in many developing countries already are elevated and in several cases acute, distress levels.

    “While the recent explosion of corporate debt, much of it of low credit quality, poses the most immediate danger in advanced economies, developing countries face a range of fast-deepening financial and debt vulnerabilities that do not bode well for their ability to withstand another external shock,” Kozul-Wright said.

    China also has become a crucial source of longer-term borrowing for developing countries and if its lending conditions tighten with the slowdown, those with the strongest financial links to China might be amongst the slowest to recover from the economic impact of the COVID-19 crisis.

    $2 trillion shortfall in global income

    A preliminary downside scenario sees a $2 trillion shortfall in global income with a $220 billion hit to developing countries (excluding China).

    The most badly affected economies in this scenario will be oil-exporting countries, but also other commodity exporters, which stand to lose more than one percentage point of growth, as well as those with strong trade linkages to the initially shocked economies.

    Growth decelerations between 0.7% and 0.9% are likely to occur in countries such as Canada, Mexico and the Central American region, in the Americas; countries deeply inserted in the global value chains of East and South Asia, and countries in the immediacy of the European Union.

    UNCTAD’s analysis points out that a persistent belief in the soundness of economic fundamentals and a self-correcting world economy continues to hamper policy thinking in the advanced economies.

    “This will stymie the bolder policy interventions needed to prevent the threat of a more serious crisis and increases the chances that recurrent shocks will cause serious economic damage in the future,” Kozul-Wright adds.

    Central Banks are not in a position to solve this crisis alone and an appropriate macroeconomic policy response will need aggressive fiscal spending with significant public investment, including into the care economy, and targeted welfare support for adversely affected workers, businesses and communities, the analysis says. International coordination of these programmes will be required.

    “Ultimately,’’ Kozul-Wright says, “a series of dedicated policy responses and institutional reforms are needed to prevent a localized health scare in a food market in Central China from turning into a global economic meltdown.”

     

    Share. WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    straightnewsng.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Refrain from Senseless Feud – Deputy Gov urges Border People

    January 22, 2026 --- 1:22 pm

    Consortium Plans to Invest $8 billion in Ibom Deep Seaport

    January 16, 2026 --- 9:02 pm

    US Travel Ban: Trump Lists Nigeria Among 39 Restricted Countries

    December 17, 2025 --- 10:11 pm

    Comments are closed.

    Search
    Our Picks
    Don't Miss
    Technology and Gadgets

    TikTok, Snapchat settle social media addiction lawsuit ahead of trial

    By straightnewsng.comJanuary 27, 2026 --- 10:29 pm0

    Edi Umoh TikTok and Snapchat have reached a settlement to avoid them being involved in…

    A’Ibom Police Arrest, Arraign Man over Illegal Firearms and Threat to Life

    January 27, 2026 --- 2:42 pm

    Court Orders FCTA Workers To Suspend Strike, Grants Injunction

    January 27, 2026 --- 2:01 pm

    Coup Plot: 16 Officers to Face Special Court-Martial – DHQ

    January 27, 2026 --- 6:58 am

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    The publication is committed to the principles of development journalism. We are prepared to change the public perception that the profession is a harbinger of hate, blackmail, sycophancy, prejudice and falsehood.

    We pledge to use journalism practice to give voice to the voiceless and to give people of all shades of opinions an opportunity to tell their stories.
    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Recent Posts
    • TikTok, Snapchat settle social media addiction lawsuit ahead of trial
    • A’Ibom Police Arrest, Arraign Man over Illegal Firearms and Threat to Life
    • Court Orders FCTA Workers To Suspend Strike, Grants Injunction
    • Coup Plot: 16 Officers to Face Special Court-Martial – DHQ
    • Alleged Financial Sleaze Clouds Ambassador Ayo Oke’s Appointment
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Advertise With Us
    © 2026 Straightnews Wire Limited

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.