Summary
- The Covid-19 pandemic is throwing a curved ball at us. It has made planning virtually impossible.
- While the Government is working on health intervention and economic recovery scenarios, organisations, both private and public, as well as individuals, are beginning to look at scenarios beyond the pandemic.
- FSD Kenya postulates that finance could promote the recovery of real sector livelihoods of Kenyan ‘cuspers’ ravaged by Covid-19.
The Covid-19 pandemic is throwing a curved ball at us. It has
made planning virtually impossible. The interventions we made in March
are not the ones we need today, and it is possible that in the coming
days we may have to improvise strategies to deal with the pandemic.
The
question people are asking is: How are we to live with uncertainty as a
norm? The answer lies in military intelligence that leverages on a
strategic planning method known as “scenario analysis”, also called
“scenario thinking” or “scenario planning”.
While
the Government is working on health intervention and economic recovery
scenarios, organisations, both private and public, as well as
individuals, are beginning to look at scenarios beyond the pandemic.
Economists
Anzetse Were of the Financial Sector Deepening Trust (FSD Kenya), and
Amolo Ng’weno of Bankable Frontier Associates shared thoughts on the FSD
Kenya blog on economic recovery.
For Kenya to realise a
robust and inclusive recovery, they argued, it needs to include, or
even be led by livelihoods of individuals actively earning incomes from
the informal sector — the cuspers — people on the cusp of escaping
poverty but are at risk of falling back into it.
FSD Kenya postulates that finance could promote the recovery of real sector livelihoods of Kenyan ‘cuspers’ ravaged by Covid-19.
Like
the military does in times of war, they took an agile scenario process
to create three macroeconomic trajectories, that is, Kenya limping back,
falling back or bouncing back.
The bounceback, which
is more optimistic, assumes that economic growth will resume in late
2020 with reasonable growth levels by mid- 2021. The limpback is
projected to be more draining with slower recovery that will ease in
2023. Under fallback, it could be devastating to the economy and will
take us back to the lower growth rates of the 1990s, with signs of
recovery beyond 2023. In all scenarios, digitisation will play a key
role.
These scenarios were used to tell their story of
cuspers based on data, about how the future might unfold. Their analysis
is based on the assumption that cuspers are generally differentiated
and that women, who form the majority of this group, may be especially
vulnerable.
An online survey by BFA, The Impact of
Covid-19 on Financial Lives in Eight Countries, conducted last April
established that 79-81 percent of low- and moderate-income Kenyans
reported income somewhat or significantly reduced as a result of the
pandemic.
Further,
the survey noted, conventional coping strategies to survive shocks such
as increasing income through casual work, and receiving remittances
from friends and family have been reduced.
Although
cuspers are the engine room of an inclusive economic recovery, they
suffer from financial vulnerability in times of crisis. Without social
protection in the informal sector and practical livelihood strategies,
the study says the poverty gap could grow and inequality increase within
this large group of people that supports dependents. As such, any
scenario driven by the recovery of the formal sector alone risks
squeezing this group into welfare dependency.
Through
the lenses of cuspers, there are interventions that can be made based on
each scenario. Success of a bounceback scenario will depend on what the
government does to stimulate the economy. So far, of the $503 million
stimulus announced, only $3 million will directly go to the informal
sector.
A limpback scenario may be painful depending on the source of livelihood, in terms of the sectors the cuspers are in.
A fallback scenario will overwhelm the informal sector owing to the fact that there will be less demand for goods and services.
The
authors of the FSD Kenya blog post reiterate that the scenarios are not
predictions but rather the unfolding stories to bring a clear picture
of who is being impacted.
No comments :
Post a Comment