Their upgrades didn’t signify optimism, though. They were a consequence of the downturn the forecasters were expecting for 2020. With a deep recession as the new baseline, the partial rebound they anticipated would represent a big year-over-year percentage increase in output.
And here we are. Covid-19 is claiming more lives than ever, and vaccines are rolling out more slowly than expected, so economic activity this year will track well below its pre-pandemic trajectory. But because it won’t be as depressed as last year, on paper 2021 will look like a blockbuster. Bloomberg Economics is forecasting a 4.9% increase in the world’s gross domestic product and a 3.5% increase for the U.S.—the strongest since 2005. There’s less here than meets the eye.
Economic growth is hard to predict even in a normal year. It’s infinitely harder with a pandemic raging. Vaccines were developed in record time. But more contagious strains of Covid are spreading rapidly, vaccine distribution is proving problematic, and a lot of people still aren’t taking precautions for themselves and those around them. “There will be bumps along the way,” Bloomberg Economics writes in its global outlook, understatedly.
Bu hikaye Bloomberg Businessweek dergisinin January 25, 2021 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Bloomberg Businessweek dergisinin January 25, 2021 sayısından alınmıştır.
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