Why the Wuhan coronavirus will have a limited impact on the Australian economy

By Mark Humphery-Jenner, UNSW
The Wuhan coronavirus has had a significant human toll. More than 100 people have died and nearly 3,000 are known to be infected, including some in Australia. The number actually infected will be higher. People experiencing only mild symptoms often donโt report them.
The economic cost is as hard to tease out as the health cost, but there are clues.
They suggest the coronavirus will have little impact on the global economy, quite a bit in China, and some in Australia, which will most likely be short-lived.
Confirmed cases of Wuhan coronavirus
The impact in China is already apparent, with 35 million people under effective lockdown, air travel curtailed, and some tourist destinations closed. In a sign the virus might spread, 5 million people reportedly left Wuhan before the lockdown.
The Shenzhen and Shanghai composite stock market indexes fell 3.52% and 2.75% before they closed for what turned out to be an extended Lunar New Year break.
While Chinaโs steps to contain the coronavirus will hurt its economy in the short term, in longer term they might contain the damage.
The world has changed significantly since the the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918, the Asian Flu pandemic of 1957-58 and even the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) pandemic of 2001-02.
On one hand the world has become better at containment and treatment; on the other, it has become more connected. But previous pandemics can tell us a lot.
According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Spanish Flu hit 500 million people worldwide, killing as many as 50 million worldwide, including 675,000 in the United States.
The US Congressional Budget Office believes such an event in 2006 would have cut US gross domestic product 4.25% below where it would have been.
World Bank calculations suggest a severe pandemic, killing 71 million people, would cut world GDP by about 5%.
The 1957-58 pandemic killed about 1.1 million people worldwide. A follow-up 1968 pandemic had a similar effect.
The Congressional Budget Office believes a recurrence would cut United States GDP to about 1% below where it would have been. Similar countries would be affected in a similar way. The World Bank believes such a scenario would cut world GDP by between 1% and 2%.
According to the US CDC, SARS infected around 8,100 people, with 774 dying, which was a 9.4% mortality rate. Its economic impact is open to debate. SARS mainly affected mainland China and Hong Kong, with one study estimating it cut their GDPs by 1.1% and 2.6%.
But because the event coincided with the recovery from a global recession, the effect is hard to estimate. Other estimates are less pessimistic.
The economic impact was limited, with little impact outside of China and Hong Kong, as Australiaโs Treasury noted at the time.
Hereโs what we know.
Taken together these points suggest the coronavirus is unlikely to significantly affect the world economy.
Based on what we know so far, the impact on China is likely to be short-lived.
The flow-on effect to countries with a relationship with China such as Australia is likely to modest and and also short-lived.
Should infection or mortality rates spike, the impact could worsen.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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