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V, W, U or L? Here's what kind of shape Canada's economy will be in coming out of COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic has so far spelled doom for Canada's economy, and the future looks anything but certain. What will happen next is anyone's guess, but economists think the path forward will probably look like one of a few familiar shapes.

Experts use letter shapes to describe different scenarios of how economies bounce back

Nervous traders at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange
The COVID-19 pandemic has taken stock market watchers like this trader in Frankfurt on a wild ride. The economic recovery from this coronavirus is likely to be just as up and down. (Alex Kraus/Bloomberg)

As economies around the worldtake their first,tentative steps toward restarting, Canadians are beginning to wonder what life may look like on the other side of thispandemic.

The answer to that open-ended question depends in large part on what sort of recovery we are looking at.

When asked to weigh in on the shape of things to come, one of the best ways economists have come up with to lay out the options is based on letters of the alphabet.

Will the recovery look like a Vor more like a U? What about a Nike "swoosh"or something wobbly likea W? Or the worst case scenariowill we take the dreaded L?

Even the chair of the U.S. central bank finds himself talking about these ABCs of lateinstead of his usual ones, twos and threes.

"Yeah, there areletters,"Fed chair Jerome Powell told 60 Minuteson Sunday. "People are fascinated by the possibility of different letters."

Powell saidhe thinks the economy will begin to recover in the second half of thisyear, but the future, as always, is uncertain.

He's not the only one having trouble spelling it out.

"Everyone's turned into a geometrist," saidKarl Schamotta, chief market strategist at foreign exchange firmCambridge Global Payments. He saidthere's been a lot of talk about the various letter shapes of a recovery, with only one consensus emerging so far

"There's virtually no one who thinks there will be a V-shape recovery," he said.

Ecomomists describe economic recoveries after recessions based on the letter shapes they tend to resemble (Joan Dymianiw/CBC)

The front end of the crisis has happened and certainly looked like the start of a Va steep, straight drop. The question is how fast and how sharply the economy will surge back to lifeor whether it will linger for longer at the bottom and take its time climbing back.

Schamotta believes the most likely scenario is a more gradual climb back "something like a Nike swoosh," as he describes it.

The shape of things to come

That's because Schamotta and most experts believe nothing about this crisis will be straight forward. Even a long slow climb back to normalcy will come withsetbacks.

One dreaded scenario is the so-called W-shaped recovery. Just as the economy opens up and begins to rebound, a new outbreak willforce everythingto close down again. Some models predict many stops and restarts; a series of W's withreopenings and closings as outbreaks occur.

And different sectors will reopen and readjust differently.

"Across industries, no two recovery paths are likely to be identical," TD Bank senior economist Brian DePratto said in a research note.

TD Bank sees most sectors of Canada's economy recovering in one of three ways.

Arts, entertainment, travel and tourism are projected to seean L-shaped scenariowith a hugeplungeand a long path back to some semblance of normalcy.

That's bad news for cruise shipsand hotels, but other businesses are looking at much more optimisticrecoveries.

"Some sectors, such as food retailers and transportation, are likely to see only a modest near-term hit and a quick recovery, placing them among the Vs," DePratto said.

The rest of the economy is probably looking at a U a sustained period of pain followed by an eventual, gradual rally back up to where they were before this all started.

Unlike any other recession

The near universal uncertainty around this crisis is just one of the things that sets it apart from previous downturns.

"This is not an economic event, this is a health event," saidGoldy Hyder, the president and CEO of the Business Council of Canada.

As such, he saidnavigating the pandemic requires everyone to think differently.

The 2008 financial crisis was staggering in its size and scope at the time, but, by comparison it was a fairly simple crisis to manage.

Canada's recession in 2008 and 2009 followed the path above, which sort of looks like something between a V and a U. (Joan Dymianiw/CBC)

Policymakers took action to prop up financial infrastructure, leaned on traditional stimulus programs to get people back to work and lowered interest rates to encourage consumers to borrow and spend.

Once the economy bottomed out, the climb back was fairly swift.

This one likely won't be because it's a different type of recession.

"We're dealing not just with a medical virus that has impacted how we behave," saidSchamotta. "We're also dealing with a psychological virus and the question now is when do we feel comfortable, when do we return to those behaviours?"

Fear is spreading like a virus

Hyder agrees and saidinstead of traditional stimulus, what's needed is a boost in confidence.

"There is no jumping into the deep end here," saidHyder. "There is tiptoe your way in, one step at a time from the shallow end."

Consumers are scared and worried about spreading the virus, Hyder said, andbusinesses know the risk of reopening too early.

"What happens if you open up the economy and no one shows up?"

Just as different parts of the economy took different hits from COVID-19, they will also face different recoveries. (Michelle Nichols/Reuters)

Hyder saidyou can flip a switch and open stores and services, but convincing consumers to return to previous habits will be a tougher task. Any recovery model would be wise to remember that.

"It's not any letter, it's an oscillator fan," saidHyder, andthat scenario would come in and out of recovery for a long period of time.

"Multiple Ws together is a scenario that many people feel is possible."

It may be daunting and disheartening to imagine the many ways in which the recovery can derail, the ways in which the outbreak may linger and dampen economic growth for a longer time than we initially thought.

'Short memories'

But Schamotta has one caveat to all the worst-case scenarios.

"Humans have very short memories," he said. "It's extremely likely that human beings become fatigued of this and move on and snap back to old behaviours."

Schamotta saidthat because humans have an innate desire to get back to something they recognize as normal, and that's likely to be the case this time around, too. What shape that new normal takes is anyone's guess, but with the alphabet soup of options on the table, one thing is certain: COVID-19 needn't necessarily spell doom for the world's economy.

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