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Philippine economy to take 10 years to recover from virus, says official

Lockdowns and other restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus have shattered the Southeast Asian nation's economy, throwing millions out of work and leaving many poor families hungry.

AFP
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A woman and children who were refused entry due to health protocol restrictions to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus listen to mass outside the Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene in Manila, Philippines, in this file photo, March 24. The Philippines has recorded more than 2.5 million infections, including over 38,000 deaths. Photo: AP
A woman and children who were refused entry due to health protocol restrictions to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus listen to mass outside the Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene in Manila, Philippines, in this file photo, March 24. The Philippines has recorded more than 2.5 million infections, including over 38,000 deaths. Photo: AP

The Philippine economy will take more than a decade to return to pre-pandemic growth, an official said Thursday, warning the next two generations of Filipinos would be paying for the cost of Covid-19.

Lockdowns and other restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus have shattered the Southeast Asian nation’s economy, throwing millions out of work and leaving many poor families hungry.

“Our long run total cost of Covid and the quarantine both to the present and future society – meaning our children and our grandchildren – will reach US$810 billion, Economic Planning secretary Karl Kendrick Chua said.

The figure is more than twice the Philippines’ gross domestic product in 2020, which the World Bank estimates at US$361.5 billion.

The losses would be felt over the next 10 to 40 years, Chua said.

Consumption, investment and tax revenues would struggle to recover as social distancing rules prevent key sectors, such as tourism and restaurants, from fully reopening.

Lower productivity caused by death, illness or lack of schooling during the pandemic “is likely to be permanent”, he added.

The economy is expected to expand by 4-5% this year, Chua said, compared with a record contraction of 9.6% in 2020.

But it would take 10 years before the country returned to pre-pandemic growth, which averaged 6.4% in the 10 years before Covid-19 hit.

Nearly 70% of the economy, including 23.3 million workers, remained under “heightened quarantine” restrictions, Chua said.

He warned lockdowns caused greater hunger and were not the answer to the pandemic.

The Philippines has recorded more than 2.5 million infections, including over 38,000 deaths.

Just over a quarter of the adult population has been fully vaccinated amid a delayed and slow vaccination rollout.