One of the lasting consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic will be the way we work with more time spent on working from home compared to the pre-pandemic situation. Clearly, the possibility to do so depends to a large extent on the industry, the nature of the job but also the country. These developments would have profound implications on where people decide to live, the role of cities, the need for office space, the use of means of transport, the needs in terms of IT infrastructure (high-speed internet), etc. A priori, one would expect a positive impact on productivity, in particular due to increased worker satisfaction and efficiency. Based on recent surveys, that is also what companies seem to expect
The credit impulse declined sharply in the eurozone in March 2021, reflecting the fall in the annual growth of loan outstanding, although this resulted from a high base for comparison and was therefore widely expected. Moves by eurozone governments to introduce support measures for companies’ financing led to exceptionally strong growth in bank lending to non-financial corporations from March 2020 onwards.
The German statistical office Destatis estimates that economic activity shrank by 1.7% in Q1 2021 after robust growth in the second half of 2020 (8.5% in Q3 and 0.5% in Q4). This was largely due to the tightening of the Corona restrictions in mid-December, which has been a drag on private consumption.
The Covid-19 pandemic continues to set records, with 825,721 new infections recorded on 28 April alone. Much of this surge has occurred in India, where there were 349,378 new cases, or 42% of the global total, whilst in the rest of Asia, Europe and the Americas we have seen a fall in the number of new cases over the past few days.