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4 years ago

Lucky no more? Australia's golden economy faces long road to virus recovery

People are seen on the nearly deserted steps of the Sydney Opera House in Australia, March 26, 2020 — Reuters/Files
People are seen on the nearly deserted steps of the Sydney Opera House in Australia, March 26, 2020 — Reuters/Files

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Coronavirus has done to Australia what even the global financial crisis couldn’t: abruptly end a record growth run and help trigger a deep recession from which the country will take time to recover.

While Australia has had great success so far in heading off the pandemic, with just over 100 deaths, the cure of shutting out the rest of the world means massive hits to three key growth drivers - tourism, education and immigration.

Fiona Gulin was 18 when the last recession hit Australia in the early 1990s. Back then, she managed to keep a part-time job at a music publication, before moving on to full-time work and a lucrative career in the entertainment industry.

This time, she hasn’t been so lucky.

“I have been hit hard in this recession,” said Gulin, who was laid off in April as the marketing director of the ANZ Stadium in Sydney, prompting her to ditch her rented house in the city and move back to her home in Melbourne.

Gulin is among the hundreds of thousands who have lost their livelihoods overnight to the Covid-19 pandemic as Australia suffers its first recession in 30 years and its unemployment rate hits a 19-year high of 7.1 per cent.

Even though Australia’s economy was among the first to reopen after lockdowns worldwide and earlier than the government expected, it contracted 0.3 per cent in the first quarter and a new wave of coronavirus cases could put a recovery at risk.

Women have been particularly hard hit.

The unemployment rate for females looking for full-time work surged to 8.3 per cent in May from 5.4 per cent in February before coronavirus-driven shutdowns kicked in. That compares with 7.0 per cent for men from 4.8 per cent in February.

“Australia is known as the lucky country but I am not very lucky at the moment,” Gulin, who is receiving government welfare payments, told Reuters.

“I have been talking to a few people about some opportunities but nothing has come up yet.”

Vulnerable services

During the unprecedented run of growth, Australia transformed into an open, services-driven economy, feeding China’s rise with its mineral and commodity wealth and shedding much of its manufacturing capability.

The services sector accounts for almost two-thirds of Australia’s A$2 trillion ($1.4 trillion) annual economic output - but is now particularly vulnerable to the closure of national borders and social distancing measures to tame coronavirus.

“The tourism-dependent economies are the ones we worry about the most,” said Citi’s global chief economist, Catherine Mann.

Mann sees a V-shaped rebound for manufacturing generally but for the services or consumer discretionary sector, “it is absolutely an L-shaped recovery,” she said, meaning it could take a while for growth to fully recover.

“What was lost in the early part of this year will never be recovered from the standpoint of revenues for a company.”

Virus shadow

Policymakers, too, are worried about the long road back to economic health.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has pledged to keep its benchmark cash rate at a record low 0.25 per cent until there is progress in achieving its employment and inflation goals.

“We’re going to have low interest rates for a long period of time,” central bank Governor Philip Lowe said last week, adding that there would be “a shadow from the virus for quite a few years.”

“People will be more risk averse, they won’t want to borrow. In Australia, we’re going to have lower population dynamics,” Lowe said, referring to the idea that fewer foreigners entering the country would lead to lower consumer demand and a tighter labour market.

Puja Basnet, an international student from Nepal, is reconsidering her options in Australia after losing her part-time job as a waitress.

“I was at home for two months without work and I have almost run out of my savings. As a non-Australian I don’t even have access to Centrelink,” she said, referring to government welfare payments.

For Basnet, the future is even more challenging as more people are now jostling for each job.

An L-shaped recovery also means the unemployment rate will stay higher for longer.

“I am really worried about the future. I have been applying for 30-40 jobs a week but there has been zero responses.”

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