Article(electronic)December 14, 2022

Seven finance and trade lessons from Covid-19 for future pandemics

In: Oxford review of economic policy, Volume 38, Issue 4, p. 876-886

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Abstract

Abstract
Pandemics and epidemics pose systemic risks to lives, societies, and to global economic security—and their frequency is expected to increase as rising trade and increased human interaction with animals leads to the emergence of new diseases. The Covid-19 pandemic teaches us that we can and must be better prepared, with scope for much greater global coordination to address the financing, supply-chain, and trade barriers that amplified the pandemic's economic costs and contributed to the emergence of new variants. This paper draws seven early lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic that could inform future policy priorities and help shape a better global response to future crises.

Languages

English

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

ISSN: 1460-2121

DOI

10.1093/oxrep/grac031

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