Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery

In 2020 COVID-19 (coronavirus) plunged the Western Balkan countries, like the rest of the world, into deep recession. Economic activity contracted by an estimated 3.4 percent - the worst downturn on record. The primary causes were the drop in both domestic and foreign demand and disruptions in supply chains, especially early in the year when activity in a number of sectors simply shut down. Countries like Montenegro that have a services or tourism-oriented economy, and those where more stringent containment measures and lockdowns were imposed fared the worst. The economy began to reactivate in Q3 2020, supported by a partial easing of stringent lockdowns and the revival of global demand as vaccine development advanced. However, in late 2020 restrictions were renewed in response to a resurgence of infections across most of the region; they have kept the recovery subdued. The crisis has led to significant job losses and interruptions in welfare improvements, but the labor market is rebounding from the troughs of the recession. As noted in the Fall 2020 Regular Economic Report (RER), the pandemic halted a decade of progress in boosting incomes and reducing poverty: Since its start 139,000 jobs have been lost and between 165,000 and 336,000 people in theregion were pushed into poverty. However, job support schemes and other government measures limited the labor market fallout and helped to prevent steeper spikes in poverty. By yearend, the labor market had recovered half its pandemic losses, but large numbers of people are still unemployed, and many dropped out of the labor force discouraged by the poor economic prospects. Moreover, workers with less education, women, youth, those in contact-intensive sectors, and those informally employed have suffered disproportionate livelihood and income losses.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021-04-27
Subjects:ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC RECESSION, LABOR MARKET, POVERTY, CORONAVIRUS, COVID-19, PANDEMIC IMPACT, PANDEMIC RESPONSE, FISCAL SUPPORT, INFLATION, EXTERNAL IMBALANCES, COVID-19 VACCINATION, INFORMALITY, ECONOMIC RECOVERY, ECONOMIC OUTLOOK,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/303461619449910634/Subdued-Recovery
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35509
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spelling dig-okr-10986355092021-04-28T05:10:45Z Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery World Bank ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RECESSION LABOR MARKET POVERTY CORONAVIRUS COVID-19 PANDEMIC IMPACT PANDEMIC RESPONSE FISCAL SUPPORT INFLATION EXTERNAL IMBALANCES COVID-19 VACCINATION INFORMALITY ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK In 2020 COVID-19 (coronavirus) plunged the Western Balkan countries, like the rest of the world, into deep recession. Economic activity contracted by an estimated 3.4 percent - the worst downturn on record. The primary causes were the drop in both domestic and foreign demand and disruptions in supply chains, especially early in the year when activity in a number of sectors simply shut down. Countries like Montenegro that have a services or tourism-oriented economy, and those where more stringent containment measures and lockdowns were imposed fared the worst. The economy began to reactivate in Q3 2020, supported by a partial easing of stringent lockdowns and the revival of global demand as vaccine development advanced. However, in late 2020 restrictions were renewed in response to a resurgence of infections across most of the region; they have kept the recovery subdued. The crisis has led to significant job losses and interruptions in welfare improvements, but the labor market is rebounding from the troughs of the recession. As noted in the Fall 2020 Regular Economic Report (RER), the pandemic halted a decade of progress in boosting incomes and reducing poverty: Since its start 139,000 jobs have been lost and between 165,000 and 336,000 people in theregion were pushed into poverty. However, job support schemes and other government measures limited the labor market fallout and helped to prevent steeper spikes in poverty. By yearend, the labor market had recovered half its pandemic losses, but large numbers of people are still unemployed, and many dropped out of the labor force discouraged by the poor economic prospects. Moreover, workers with less education, women, youth, those in contact-intensive sectors, and those informally employed have suffered disproportionate livelihood and income losses. 2021-04-27T13:12:09Z 2021-04-27T13:12:09Z 2021-04-27 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/303461619449910634/Subdued-Recovery http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35509 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling Europe and Central Asia Eastern Europe Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo North Macedonia (Formerly the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia) Montenegro Serbia
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
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access En linea
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RECESSION
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
FISCAL SUPPORT
INFLATION
EXTERNAL IMBALANCES
COVID-19 VACCINATION
INFORMALITY
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RECESSION
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
FISCAL SUPPORT
INFLATION
EXTERNAL IMBALANCES
COVID-19 VACCINATION
INFORMALITY
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
spellingShingle ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RECESSION
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
FISCAL SUPPORT
INFLATION
EXTERNAL IMBALANCES
COVID-19 VACCINATION
INFORMALITY
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RECESSION
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
FISCAL SUPPORT
INFLATION
EXTERNAL IMBALANCES
COVID-19 VACCINATION
INFORMALITY
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
World Bank
Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery
description In 2020 COVID-19 (coronavirus) plunged the Western Balkan countries, like the rest of the world, into deep recession. Economic activity contracted by an estimated 3.4 percent - the worst downturn on record. The primary causes were the drop in both domestic and foreign demand and disruptions in supply chains, especially early in the year when activity in a number of sectors simply shut down. Countries like Montenegro that have a services or tourism-oriented economy, and those where more stringent containment measures and lockdowns were imposed fared the worst. The economy began to reactivate in Q3 2020, supported by a partial easing of stringent lockdowns and the revival of global demand as vaccine development advanced. However, in late 2020 restrictions were renewed in response to a resurgence of infections across most of the region; they have kept the recovery subdued. The crisis has led to significant job losses and interruptions in welfare improvements, but the labor market is rebounding from the troughs of the recession. As noted in the Fall 2020 Regular Economic Report (RER), the pandemic halted a decade of progress in boosting incomes and reducing poverty: Since its start 139,000 jobs have been lost and between 165,000 and 336,000 people in theregion were pushed into poverty. However, job support schemes and other government measures limited the labor market fallout and helped to prevent steeper spikes in poverty. By yearend, the labor market had recovered half its pandemic losses, but large numbers of people are still unemployed, and many dropped out of the labor force discouraged by the poor economic prospects. Moreover, workers with less education, women, youth, those in contact-intensive sectors, and those informally employed have suffered disproportionate livelihood and income losses.
format Report
topic_facet ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RECESSION
LABOR MARKET
POVERTY
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19
PANDEMIC IMPACT
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
FISCAL SUPPORT
INFLATION
EXTERNAL IMBALANCES
COVID-19 VACCINATION
INFORMALITY
ECONOMIC RECOVERY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery
title_short Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery
title_full Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery
title_fullStr Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery
title_full_unstemmed Western Balkans Regular Economic Report, No. 19, Spring 2021 : Subdued Recovery
title_sort western balkans regular economic report, no. 19, spring 2021 : subdued recovery
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021-04-27
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/303461619449910634/Subdued-Recovery
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35509
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