New economic data from across the APEC region shows a softer economic contraction of 1.9 percent in 2020, with continued
fiscal measures leading to a rise in government consumption and improved investment and household consumption.
According to the latest APEC Regional Trends Analysis, household consumption, APEC’s main driver of growth, improved to -3.9 percent in the second half of 2020 on a
year-on-year basis, as compared to -7.0 percent in the first half of last year. Investment followed the same trend,
recording a smaller decline of -6.1 percent in the second half of 2020 compared to -10.5 percent in the first half.
The report notes that governments across the region have learned effective ways to manage the pandemic and people have
learned to adapt to new ways of earning a living. This has resulted in a gradual reopening and resumption of economic
activities, which boosted consumption.
The region’s economy is estimated to grow by 6.3 percent in 2021, with an expected strong increase in domestic and
global activity, as pent-up demand is unleashed. The development and production of multiple vaccines also boost optimism
for a more durable economic recovery.
“The worst fears from last year did not come to pass as we saw stronger economic rebound in the second half of last
year, and this will likely continue throughout 2021,” said Dr Denis Hew, Director of the APEC Policy Support Unit.
“However, the region continues to face significant uncertainties, largely linked to how the pandemic is evolving, while
job losses due to the pandemic and expectations of higher inflation this year could suppress consumer spending.”
The weakness in investments, which is projected to extend to 2021, could also affect growth, according to the report.
“The start-stop economic reopening scenario as economies navigate through a resurgence of infections could hold back
investment activity,” Dr Hew added.
The report warns that the uneven recovery in the region is largely related to differences in vaccine access and
availability. The majority of APEC member economies could achieve widespread immunization by mid-2022 onwards, with some
anticipated to do so earlier, by the end of 2021.
The disproportionate impact of the pandemic is also highlighted in the report. The pandemic affected everyone
everywhere, women, young people, the elderly and the poor experienced layers of negative impacts.
Most micro, small and medium enterprises lack the capital and technological expertise to make their shift to online,
translating into losses and closures and adding to rising livelihood fragility and poverty.
“People with insufficient digital skills and equipment or those living in areas where access to the internet is
unreliable or expensive are denied the chance to reconnect, unable to continue their work and study,” noted Rhea C.
Hernando, a macroeconomist with the APEC Policy Support Unit.
Unequal access to vaccines also aggravated the divergence in speed and strength of economic recovery in the region.
Lower-income economies that rely largely on the COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) facility for their supply of
vaccines are in for a longer battle, making the effort to economic recovery very fragile amid higher risk of virus
resurgence.
“The pandemic has exposed the underlying gaps and inequality that have posed significant challenges to policymakers and
societies,” Hernando added.
“We need to ensure that no one is left behind in our recovery journey by working together to contain the pandemic,
implement structural reforms to boost human capital development and protect the environment,” she concluded.
View the latest APEC Regional Trends Analysis, May 2021