Individuals
may change their risk perceptions permanently after a sharp and sudden loss
of income, leading to higher precautionary saving. In the short term, this
may mean less debt, but in the long term it could lead to deeper structural
changes, such as less willingness to take on a 30-year mortgage. In many
countries, home ownership is low because long-term debt is seen more as a
risk than an opportunity. Consumption patterns may change if people whose
health is at high risk avoid certain activities. Consumers may decide to
hold more essential goods in fear of new lockdowns—good news for toilet
paper manufacturers, at least! But what about a young woman who has mulled
over a transformational business idea night after night at her kitchen
table, but whose now-heightened aversion to risk means a business is never
started, employees are never hired, and products are never launched? High
uncertainty makes it harder still to predict the net impact of so many
behavior changes.
Companies
also face a new set of uncertainties. US carmakers have experienced parts
shortages because the Mexican state of Chihuahua, where many suppliers are
based, has limited factory attendance to 50 percent of employees. Such
disruptions may lead manufacturers to diversify their supply chains or keep
more inventory on hand. Employee health is another new operational risk.
Will companies decide to rely more on automation as a result?
Changing suppliers, keeping more inventory, and needing to invest in more
advanced machinery all bear costs for manufacturers often operating on thin
profit margins. But raising prices in a recession is also difficult. For
goods deemed “essential,” like medical supplies, countries may change
regulations or subsidize domestic production, altering the competitive
landscape. Similar to households, companies hit by a sharp drop in revenue
may keep higher liquidity buffers. Some changes may be quantifiable once
shifts in production stabilize and the impact on earnings becomes clearer,
but uncertainty will remain for a long time for many companies.
Market volatility, defaults, and evolving regulation will change the
landscape for the financial sector. The extreme swings in
market conditions and asset prices seen early in the outbreak will change
risk management models, with impacts on liquidity and capital buffers held
to manage such risks. Regulations may also change, as policymakers seek to
prevent a recurrence of the volatility and reduce the need for central bank
interventions to preserve market functioning. Moreover, the recession will
increase losses.
Economic policymakers
are confronted with an intricate new puzzle: how to finance higher spending
demands amid falling revenue and ballooning debt. Without a solution to the
health crisis, governments will be dealing with unmeasurable variables in
trying to plan the future. Private sector interventions through guarantees
or direct ownership may have lasting and hard-to-quantify implications for
competition and private risk-taking, beyond the immediate impact on public
sector balance sheets
What does all this mean for the IMF? We have been called to action like
never before, providing emergency support to a record number of countries
within a short time frame. We have introduced new support facilities and
expanded the borrowing limits on existing ones.