As the world seeks to comprehend the new normal, we face many unknowns.
Will jobs come back? How will we travel again? What will recovery look
like? Much is still a question mark. In fact, we are living in the most
“unmeasurable of times,” writes the IMF’s Geoffrey Okamoto, making it hard
to quantify high uncertainty and risk.
What we do know is that the age of COVID-19 has painfully exposed and
widened existing economic and social divisions and created new ones. It has
accentuated disparities among workers, especially the young, female, and
least educated. It has made more acute frailties in public health systems,
the precariousness of work, and the digital divide. It has challenged
governments, which now face higher spending needs and ballooning debts. And
it has brought to light the simmering issue of racial injustice.
Yet this crisis and the fault lines it is exposing are inspiring calls for
a rethinking of our priorities and reconsidering the very structure of the
world economy toward a future that is more equitable, adaptable, and
sustainable—more resilient. This issue of F&D gives voice to diverse
contributors on what needs to be done.
“The networked problems of our time are amenable to networked solutions,”
writes Ian Goldin, making the case for international cooperation not only
among governments but also in civil society and business. Joseph Stiglitz
argues for rewriting the rules of the economy to protect workers and the
environment, calling for greater global and national solidarity. Carmen
Reinhart, Kenneth Rogoff, and others consider ways to handle a coming wave
of debt restructuring for the poorest countries. Kevin Watkins urges debt
relief for the poorest countries, including by converting debt liabilities
into investments that protect children. Other contributors focus on the
role of new technologies, climate, and public health, including vaccine
development. Finally, the IMF’s Ratna Sahay and coauthors grapple with race and racism in
the economics profession.
The post-pandemic world will likely be transformed in important ways. If
the crisis prompts a radical reset of our economic and social life with
policies that invest in people and reflect a shared sense of our fate as
human beings, so much the better. The world will emerge resilient from this
dark chapter. In the words of songwriter Leonard Cohen, “There’s a crack in
everything, that’s how the light gets in.”