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Make the current scenario an opportunity
The UN-ESCAP (Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2020) was released on Wednesday. The survey could not have come at a more opportune time.
The UN-ESCAP (Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2020) was released on Wednesday. The survey could not have come at a more opportune time. The world, as we all know, is reeling under the Covid-19 pandemic.
Lockdown of nations combating the deadly virus has changed life forever. The world may come out of the scare sooner. Yet, it has to recalibrate itself to the post-corona times, otherwise, it is not going to benefit in any sense.
The survey report suggests not only increased spending on managing Covid-19 pandemic but also on decarbonising to tackle climate emergency.
The regional arm of the UN suggested that the novel coronavirus pandemic is having far-reaching economic and social consequences for the Asia-Pacific region, with strong cross-border spill over effects through trade, tourism and financial linkages.
The Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2020 highlights the Covid-19 pandemic as the immediate risk to the region's economic outlook, deepening the economic slowdown that was already underway.
Although there are significant uncertainties surrounding the pandemic, the negative impacts are likely to be substantial. As governments respond to the unprecedented health crisis and introduce economic stimulus packages, the report estimates that Asia-Pacific developing countries should increase health emergency spending by $880 million per year.
The survey also calls for Asia-Pacific countries to consider establishing a regional fund to respond to future health emergencies. The ESCAP report suggests that, in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, policymakers should maintain accommodative macroeconomic policies to sustain the economic health of the region.
Fiscal and monetary policies should be focused on supporting affected enterprises and households and preventing economic contagion. Fiscal spending can also play a significant role in enhancing the ability of health responders to monitor the spread of the pandemic, care for infected people and improve health emergency preparedness.
At the same time, countries should take the opportunity posed by these challenging times to rethink their economic development strategies towards a more inclusive, sustainable and planet-friendly economy.
Countries in the region are not only going through a public health crisis but also a climate emergency, which is permanent and even more far-reaching and potentially more disastrous than the pandemic. Policymakers should not lose sight of people and the planet.
When it comes to designing economic stimulus packages, social inclusiveness and environmental sustainability must be built into every decision. The ESCAP report further reveals that the decades-long high economic growth in the region has been accompanied by growing inequality of income and opportunity, and detrimental impacts on the planet, which are endangering the well-being of present and future generations.
Unsustainable consumption and production patterns have substantially increased greenhouse gas emissions, exacerbating the vulnerability of the region to climate change. Additionally, $240 billion worth of annual subsidies continue to feed the region's heavy dependence on fossil-fuels.
The survey calls for a transition towards sustainable consumption and production, with cleaner production and less material-intensive lifestyles, supported by enabling policies.
This would require all stakeholders, notably governments, businesses and consumers, to urgently align their own goals and actions with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Strengthening of regional cooperation to raise the ambition to tackle climate emergency, is the only way out.
Let the governments scale up their efforts on climate-related standards, carbon pricing and implement sustainable consumption and production patterns at the regional level taking the current scenario as an opportunity.
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