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World Bank president David Malpass Admits Shortage Of Resources While Recovering From COVID-19 Damage

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World Bank President David Malpass in an interview to AFP has said, the global economy is facing “staggeringly large” losses and the recovery effort is hampered by a shortage of resources to make up for the damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

AFP further reported, While the Washington-based development lender has rushed out new programs to deploy $160 billion in funding to 100 countries in an effort to addresses the immediate emergency, the crisis will force developing nations to rethink the structure of their economies.

Initial estimates of $5 trillion in economic value destroyed by the COVID-19 measures likely falls far short of the actual damage that will be done by the efforts to contain the virus, he said.

The bank warned that the worldwide recession will drive 60 million people into extreme poverty but Malpass said that grim projection likely will become much worse as the crisis progresses. As he deals with the emergency, what keeps the World Bank chief up at night?

“Not enough resources,” he said.

“I keep looking… for others to add resources to the programs that we have up and running,” among them direct cash payments to help the most vulnerable people in developing nations, Malpass said.

The World Bank will release its updated Global Economic Prospects (GEP) growth forecasts next week, but the scope and speed of the pandemic’s impact almost defies description, and will leave long-lasting scars.

“The countries are facing the deepest global recession since World War II,” Malpass said. “And that should keep lots of people up at night worrying about the consequences for the poor, for the vulnerable within those economies, for children, for healthcare workers, all facing unprecedented challenges.”

While advanced economies will face the deepest downturns in percentage terms, “in many ways the more dangerous contractions are in the poorest countries, because they were closer to the poverty line before the pandemic.”

The deterioration in extreme poverty in large part will depend on how soon advanced economies can reopen, since developing nations depend on markets in rich countries, he said.

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