COVID-19’s impact on the world’s labour markets is unprecedented. In the United States, 16.8 million people applied for unemployment benefits over the period March 19 to April 9, a number never before reported in American history. In Mexico, 346,878 formal jobs were lost in only 24 days (March 18 to April 6). For Latin America and the Caribbean as a whole, this health crisis has emerged amidst a weak economic context: after the 2000-2013 boom, informality went from 61% to 55%, with the creation of 36 million formal jobs; but since 2015 this growth has stagnated and informality in the region stands at around 56% of the total employed.
There is no consensus on the magnitude or duration of the pandemic or its full effects on the economy, but there is consensus on the sectors that will be most affected by quarantines and social distancing. This includes the trade sector, restaurants and hotels, as well as the transport sector. Lower aggregate demand will also have substantial effects on manufacturing sectors, as health restrictions have already begun to disrupt global supply chains.
At the IDB, we created three possible scenarios to measure the potential impact of the pandemic on employment in the region. Estimates of job losses by economic activity were made, taking into account the largest historical declines in countries’ GDP. Additionally, the magnitudes for smaller countries and more open economies were separately analyzed, characteristics that imply greater reductions than those of larger and middle-income countries.
- Short-term crisis. In this scenario we would see a fall in output twice that observed in the 2009 crisis, with a negative growth rate close to 4 percentage points.
- Medium-term crisis. The recession would span three consecutive quarters, with a negative growth rate close to 10 percentage points.
- Prolonged recession. A major recession without any kind of economic recovery in the medium term, and a negative growth rate close to 15 percentage points.