Conference & Meetings World Issue 106 | Page 10

Economic overview Connecting on the economy ECONOMIST ROGER MARTIN-FAGG OFFERED SOME LIKELY SCENARIOS FOR THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AND EVENTS INDUSTRY DURING A RECENT UFI CONNECTS SESSION lobal association for the exhibition industry, UFI’s webinar series, UFI Connects, have been offering event professionals a regular opportunity for exchange of information and economist Roger Martin-Fagg was guest speaker at the ‘The Economist’s View Beyond Covid-19’ session in April and predicted a strong return for the global economy provided lockdown can be ended. Moderator UFI MD Kai Hattendorf tested the temperature of the virtual room, with a poll for the 300 or so online: ‘What type of economic recovery do you expect after the Covid-19 pandemic?’ 1. Y or V shape (fast in fast out); 2. U shape (more extended process) or 3. L shape (recession)? The results: 10% - Y/V; 68% - U and 22% - L. Martin-Fagg took issue immediately with the 68% inclined to think the U-shaped recovery most likely and outlined reasons for a V-shape recovery being most likely. Although his theories were drawn predominantly from UK data and referenced mainly Western, economies, Martin-Fagg offered plenty of general food for thought. He noted that differences in measurement techniques made reaching firm uniform conclusions problematic, giving the example that measuring UK GDP over the next six months using the ‘expenditure’ method would give a figure representing a drop of around 15%, yet if one used the yardstick of ‘income’ it would only drop by 5%. Western governments were trying to maintain short-run economic activity, he pointed out, but much would depend on how much money there was and how quickly it got spent. 10 / CONFERENCE & MEETINGS WORLD A normal recession, he said, came when the money supply contracted. And Martin-Fagg likened money in this situation to water going through a pipe – or rather in the coronavirus context, getting stuck in the pipe. People could not go out and spend and central banks were effectively “creating money out of thin air” for their governments. “Around $7 trillion of new money will enter the global economy over next 18 months,” said Martin-Fagg, “equivalent to 10% of global GDP flowing into businesses through wage support and loans.” Martin-Fagg was optimistic, however, that as soon as lockdown is over, economies would manage to grow by the end of year. “All we need is for money to move through, for us to socialise and shop,” said Martin-Fagg. The economist then explained that the Eurozone Purchasing Managers’ Index had reached its lowest mark ever, crashing to a figure of just 28. In the USA it had dropped to 38. China’s manufacturing actually rebounded in March, however. Martin-Fagg ruled out a prolonged L-shape recession, saying that such a scenario could only take place in Western economies when people save much more money because the value of / ISSUE 106 their key asset (usually a house) is falling. “Prices will stick and that is the key reason there will not be an L shape,” he believed. He did admit that variations in traditions and age demographics affected the picture in some countries, highlighting Italy had more coronavirus cases and deaths than South Korea. Casting his gaze into 2021, Martin-Fagg reminded that, after SARS, global growth didn’t collapse. Looking at the events industry, the economist said there could be a more pessimistic outcome than for the economy in general due to its dependence on international travel. Questions such as, ‘were delegates coming from virus-free countries?’ would need to be taken into the equation, although events dependent on local markets could be confident of coming back straight away. And, in a nod to Asia Pacific, he said countries in that region would have the most headroom for fiscal expansion. He concluded that, over the next six months, GDP would fall 5-7% in most countries. But as soon as lockdown is over next year could see growth of over 2%. Event organisers, Martin-Fagg said, needed to consider over the next nine months questions such as, ‘Do I have enough people?’ ‘Is my supply chain organised well enough?’ and ‘Will inflation take off due to money supply increase?’. Visit the www.ufi. org website for more details of the UFI Connects series.