From a Recession to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Inflation–Unemployment Comparison between the UK and India
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Theoretical Foundation
2.2. Empirical Results of Studies from India and the UK
2.3. The New Policy Initiatives and Indian Economy
2.4. Brexit and the UK Economy
2.5. India and the UK in the Wake of COVID-19
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Data Description
3.2. Methods
4. Results
5. Discussion and Policy Recommendations
5.1. Recession to Stagflation or Deeper Recession?
5.2. Addressing the Supply Side or Demand Side
5.3. The Current Crisis and Building New Economic Models
5.4. Time Horizon Based Recovery Path for India and the UK
6. Summary and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
References
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Polynomial Regression Results | India | UK | Spline Regression Results | India | UK |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intercept | 5.1558 *** | 1.81636 *** | Intercept | 0.8285 | 1.4791 *** |
Poly (Unemp, degree = 2) 1 | 4.6318 * | −1.89629 *** | bs(Unemp, knots)1 | 3.1237 | 1.9024 *** |
Poly (Unemp, degree = 2) 2 | −9.1289 ** | −3.39464 *** | bs(Unemp, knots)2 | 0.7920 | 0.4669 |
bs(Unemp, knots)3 | 6.5250 *** | −1.1343 ** | |||
bs(Unemp, knots)4 | 2.8339 | NA | |||
bs(Unemp, knots)5 | −1.1375 | NA | |||
bs(Unemp, knots)6 | 4.4670 ** | NA | |||
Adjusted R Squared | 0.4352 | 0.5999 | Adjusted R Squared | 0.5708 | 0.6029 |
s(Unemployment)—India | s(Unemployment)—UK | ||
---|---|---|---|
Estimates before Outlier Removal | Estimates after Outlier Removal | ||
Parametric coefficients | |||
Intercept | 5.158 *** (0.1528) | 5.1449 *** (0.1637) | 1.8164 *** (0.0515) |
Approximate significance of smooth terms | |||
Estimated degree of freedom (edf) | 8.049 | 7.145 | 4.546 |
Reference df | 8.739 | 8.198 | 5.564 |
F Stat | 14.43 | 14.29 | 20.69 |
P Value | <2 × 10−16 *** | <2 × 10−16 *** | 1.85 × 10−5 *** |
Adjusted R Squared | 0.687 | 0.687 | 0.677 |
GCV | 1.5589 | 1.636 | 0.16226 |
Deviance Explained | 73.3% | 73% | 70.7% |
Scale estimate | 1.307 | 1.3846 | 0.1459 |
Relief (Short Term) | Recovery (Intermediate) | Reform (Long Term) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Current | Proposed | Current | Proposed | Current | Proposed |
Fiscal Stimuli (Tax concessions, employment related measures) | Aggressive Direct Spending (Consumption Expenditure) | ------- | Build Up Health infrastructure | Structural Changes | Liquidity Adjustment |
Monetary Reliefs (Loans, moratorium, debt repayments) | Direct Benefits Transfer | -------- | Structural Changes | Foreign Trade Policy | Foreign Investment Policy |
Monetary Infusion (Adjusting the lending rates) | New/Special Support Schemes | -------- | Enhancing the Working Capital | Foreign Investment Policy | Foreign Trade Policy |
Usage of Successful Schemes (MGNREGA, PM KISAN) | -------- | Support for MSMEs and Start Ups | Fiscal Consolidation |
Relief and Recovery (Short and Intermediate Term) | Reform (Long Term) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Current | Proposed | Current | Proposed |
Fiscal Stimuli (Support to businesses, strengthening the social safety net to support vulnerable people, public services and charities) | Aggressive Direct Spending (To boost the consumption demand further) | Structural Changes | Liquidity Adjustment (Policies related to monetary stability) |
Monetary Reliefs (The additional funding for the NHS, new Term Funding Scheme, reducing the UK countercyclical buffer rate to zero percent, support to SMEs) | Direct Benefits Transfer (The monetary benefits need to target the middle class and SMEs) | Foreign Trade Policy | Foreign Investment Policy (Structural changes based on technology transfer and innovation) |
Monetary Infusion (Adjusting the lending rates, expanding the central bank’s holding of UK government bonds and non-financial corporate bonds) | New/Special Support Schemes and better usage of Successful Schemes (National Health Service, Job Retention Scheme) | Foreign Investment Policy | Foreign Trade Policy (Aiming at rebuilding the global supply chains, Finding new trade partners and strategies) |
More direct support to trading units | Fiscal Consolidation (Restricting the fiscal deficit) |
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Victor, V.; Karakunnel, J.J.; Loganathan, S.; Meyer, D.F. From a Recession to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Inflation–Unemployment Comparison between the UK and India. Economies 2021, 9, 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies9020073
Victor V, Karakunnel JJ, Loganathan S, Meyer DF. From a Recession to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Inflation–Unemployment Comparison between the UK and India. Economies. 2021; 9(2):73. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies9020073
Chicago/Turabian StyleVictor, Vijay, Joshy Joseph Karakunnel, Swetha Loganathan, and Daniel Francois Meyer. 2021. "From a Recession to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Inflation–Unemployment Comparison between the UK and India" Economies 9, no. 2: 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies9020073
APA StyleVictor, V., Karakunnel, J. J., Loganathan, S., & Meyer, D. F. (2021). From a Recession to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Inflation–Unemployment Comparison between the UK and India. Economies, 9(2), 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies9020073