Assignment 1 Macro
Assignment 1 Macro
Assignment 1 Macro
ASSIGNMENT-1
Task #1 Australia
In the March of 2020, due to the outbreak of coronavirus, entire Australia went into a
During the second quarter of 2020, the GDP dipped by 7% leading to a massive contraction
in the economy. Australia’s continuous period of growth ended when the economy went into
a recession after 29 years. Lockdowns, closure of international and inter-state borders and
implementation of social distancing norms were the main factors contributing to this fall with
an increase in the unemployment rate throughout the country. Even though the economy
contracted in the first half of 2020, the Australian government was able to revive it through
simultaneous effects of fiscal and monetary policies and an increase in household expenditure
in the second half. In the September quarter, the economy rose by 3.3% with a significant
increase in the employment rate (Lim et al., 2021). The most important feature during the
pandemic was how fast and effectively the Australian economy revived after facing massive
Following the national lockdown, the unemployment rate jumped from 5.2% in
March to 6.4% in April. As expected, the employment to population ratio fell sharply to
nearly 7% below the pre-pandemic level. However, we believe that these labour market
variables are only able to capture a limited effect of the pandemic on the Australian labour
market. The employment ratio and unemployment rate do not represent the increase in
underemployment that may have occurred. Due to the pandemic, workers worked for limited
hours; supermarkets were only open for a certain duration during the lockdowns. The
headline underemployment rate increased sharply, from 8.6% in February to 13.6% in April,
the highest rate in the history of this series (Chambers et al., 2021). Economic policies, such
as the Job Keeper scheme introduced by the government have played an important role in
keeping the labour market variables stable (Lim et al., 2021). Hence, we feel that these
the pandemic, UK’s GDP declined by a record of 9.9% with real GDP falling over 20% in the
second quarter of 2020. The economy is dependent on the service sector, which was greatly
affected in the pandemic; being one of the driving factors for the decline in GDP (BBC,
2021). The labour market of the UK remained relatively stable with unemployment peaking
at 5.2% in October 2020 and employment to population ratio averaging at 75%. Reopening of
businesses and loosening up the covid restrictions helped to avoid the double recession and
USA’s consistent growth came to an end at the beginning of 2020. The country faced a
severe negative demand shock resulting from these lockdowns, social distancing norms and
closure of businesses. The economy’s reduced capacity to produce goods and services impacted
consumer spending behaviour negatively (O’Donnell et al. 2020) This led to a sharp increase
in the unemployment rate with a corresponding decrease in the employment to population ratio.
The unemployment climbed from 4.4% to 14.8%(Mar20-Apr20) immediately after the covid
restrictions(graph2.2.3). This fall in output and employment resulted in a decrease in GDP: the
first quarter of 2020 reported a decline of around 1% and thereafter a massive decline in the
next quarter of around 10% for both nominal and real GDP (graph2.2.1 & 2.2.2).
Improvement in employment and unemployment rates was observed earlier May 20 and has
been improving steadily since. The effect of these improvements was observed in GDP indexes
from the third quarter. Even after the recession, the USA’s GDP indexes have managed to
The US and the UK both are developed economies which suffered severely in the
initial phase of the pandemic just like the rest of the world. These countries had quite
different macroeconomic experiences amidst the covid pandemic except for a few
similarities. Both the countries had a similar nominal, real GDP Index and unemployment
rate in the pre-covid period. After the pandemic, only Nominal GDP indexes had a similar
trend but this time, the US had a higher nominal GDP index as compared to the UK. USA’s
GDP indexes had a slight decline but managed to keep up with the trendline whereas UK’s
GDP indexes covered slightly but remained below the trend line. The UK's real GDP Index
fell drastically more than its nominal GDP. As far as labour market variables are concerned,
the UK had an advantage. The UK managed to keep its unemployment rates and employment
to population ratio stable throughout the pandemic while the US unemployment rates spiked
to nearly 15% and the employment to population ratio sank to almost 50%.
REFERENCES
BBC News. (2021, February 12). UK economy suffered record annual slump in 2020.
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-56037123
Chambers, M., Chapman, B., & Rogerson, E. (2021). Underemployment in the Australian
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2021/jun/underemployment-in-the-
australian-labour-market.html
Lim, G., Nguyen, V., Robinson, T., Tsiaplias, S., & Wang, J. (2021). The Australian
Economy in 2020–21: The covid-19 pandemic and prospects for economic recovery.
O’Donnell, L. B., Kristen E. Broady, Wendy Edelberg, and Jimmy. (2020, September 17).
https://www.brookings.edu/research/ten-facts-about-covid-19-and-the-u-s-economy/
The Guardian. (2021, February 12). UK economy hit by record slump in 2020 but double-dip
double-dip-recession-despite-covid-slump-in-2020-ons-gdp