Why some fear a coronabond as much as the coronavirus
EUROPE can see light at the end of the Covid-19 tunnel as the numbers of daily infections and deaths from the virus fall gradually across the continent. But the economic fallout from the "Great Lockdown" is still to come. The International Monetary Fund is forecasting that the eurozone will experience a drop in real GDP of more than 7 per cent this year and only partly recover in 2021, making this downturn deeper than even the Great Recession of 2008-09.
Europe, or rather the European Union, has been largely missing in action during the continent's most serious crisis in generations. Member states have not only engaged in an unseemly scramble to secure scarce medical supplies, but have also made little tangible progress regarding the EU's contribution to the economic and financial costs of the crisis.
True, the European Central Bank has rightly done all it could to calm financial markets. But EU member states remain bogged down on the key question of whether the bloc can and will help fiscally stretched countries.
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Columns
‘Competition for talent’ a poor excuse to keep key executives’ pay under wraps
OCBC should put its properties into a Reit and distribute the trust’s units to shareholders
Why a stronger US dollar is dangerous
An overstimulated US economy is asking for trouble
Too many property agents? Cap commissions on home sales
Time to study broadening of private market access