The outbreak of COVID-19 has resulted in a global health crisis and sharp decline in economic activity that are without precedent in recent history. In just a few months, the COVID‑19 pandemic turned from a health crisis into a global economic crisis whose full extent is still unfolding one year later. The COVID-19 pandemic caused a much larger contraction in global GDP than the global financial crisis in 2008, reaching nearly 10% in the first half of 2020 and an estimated 3.4% overall in 2020. A recovery has begun, but is far from complete.
The successful development and gradual deployment of effective vaccines has significantly improved prospects for a durable recovery, but uncertainty remains high. The latest OECD Economic Outlook projects global GDP growth of 5.6% in 2021 and 4% in 2022. Nevertheless, substantial uncertainty remains. A significant rebound in economic activity depends on the effective roll-out of vaccines across the globe and the continuation of supportive fiscal and monetary policies to boost demand. With the virus and its variants continuing to spread, targeted restrictions on mobility and activity may need to be extended or reintroduced as new outbreaks occur, which could limit the pace of recovery.
There are also increasing signs of divergence across countries, sectors and households. Extended containment measures and mobility restrictions will hold back growth in some countries and service sectors in the near term. Additional factors could lead to diverging outcomes across countries and regions, including differences in the pace of vaccinations and in the degree of policy support. Households have also been unevenly impacted by the crisis, with those on low-incomes, women and younger generations suffering higher economic costs. Without enhanced policy measures, both fiscal and structural, there are strong risks that the recovery could be unequal in both pace and scale across households, firms and countries.
Government responses to the crisis have been unprecedented since the onset of the pandemic. The scale of government support to households and businesses has varied, but it has reached unparalleled levels in many countries. Fiscal packages have often consisted of a wide variety of measures including loan guarantees, job retention schemes, direct transfers, expanded access to benefits and tax measures. Strong and timely fiscal support has played a vital role in supporting incomes, preserving jobs and keeping businesses afloat.
As part of these broad fiscal packages, tax measures have played a significant role in providing crisis relief to businesses and households. In the first half of 2020, in response to broad-based lockdowns in many countries, the focus of tax measures was almost exclusively on providing emergency relief. Last year’s report on Tax and Fiscal Policy in Response to the Coronavirus Crisis highlighted that many tax measures were aimed at alleviating businesses’ cash flow difficulties to help avoid escalating problems such as the laying-off of workers, the temporary inability to pay suppliers or creditors and, in the worst cases, business closure or bankruptcy. Countries also introduced tax measures to support households, although other tools including direct transfers and expanded access to social benefits often played an even more prominent role in providing direct relief to households.
Many of the tax measures introduced in the initial stages of the crisis have been prolonged, with some being modified to channel support to the households and businesses most affected by the crisis as it has evolved. Some countries have expanded eligibility for relief to beneficiaries initially not covered by the measures or increased the generosity of initial relief measures. As the pandemic has progressed, some countries have increased targeting to ensure that support is better directed towards those that are most severely affected, especially where governments have moved away from broad-based lockdowns towards more selective and targeted containment measures.
Tax packages have also evolved, with an increasing focus on recovery-oriented stimulus measures1 to supplement the crisis relief provisions introduced in the early stages of the response to the pandemic. As lockdowns and other containment measures began to ease after the first wave of the pandemic, countries started introducing recovery-oriented tax measures, including in particular corporate tax incentives for investment as well as reduced VAT rates targeted at hard-hit sectors. In most countries, these stimulus measures have co-existed with prolonged relief measures.
Another significant trend observed over the last year is that an increasing number of countries have introduced or announced new tax increases. Unlike in the emergency phase of the crisis, a number of countries reported tax increases in the second half of 2020 and early 2021. While a few of these tax increases involved one-off or temporary measures, most are intended to be permanent. Among these longer term tax increases, some represent a continuation of pre-crisis trends, such as increases in fuel excise duties and carbon taxes, which were the most common tax increases reported by countries. On the other hand, some tax increases mark a departure from pre-crisis trends. In particular, a number of countries introduced tax increases on high-income earners, including increases in top personal income tax (PIT) rates reported in seven countries and the move from flat to progressive PIT systems in the Czech Republic and Russia. In addition, in contrast with the trend towards lower statutory corporate income tax (CIT) rates in recent decades, the United Kingdom has announced a CIT rate increase from 19% to 25% for profits above GBP 250 000 from April 2023.
Despite some common trends, there have been notable differences across regions and countries regarding the scope and types of tax packages, in part reflecting the varying prevalence of the virus and different containment approaches. Countries with severe lockdown policies have generally introduced more comprehensive tax support measures, while countries adopting less restrictive containment measures have generally introduced fewer COVID-19 related tax relief measures. The types of tax measures introduced by countries have also partly reflected the timing of virus outbreaks. For instance, in the Asia-Pacific region, many of the countries that were at the epicentre of the pandemic in late February and early March 2020 have managed to effectively contain the virus, and have subsequently introduced more stimulus-oriented tax measures than other countries that are still grappling with large numbers of infections.
The scope and scale of tax policy packages has also reflected countries’ fiscal space and their ability to rely on central bank support. Some developing and emerging countries entered the crisis with more limited fiscal space, especially in Africa and Latin America. In addition, some developing and emerging countries have not been able to use monetary policy in response to the crisis in the same way as advanced economies have. Overall, many developing and emerging economies have had less room to provide fiscal support to households and businesses than other countries. The report generally finds that countries with higher tax-to-GDP ratios have introduced larger and more comprehensive tax packages.
Tax policy responses have reflected other country-specific factors. The types of measures introduced have depended on the architecture of countries’ tax systems. For example, there has been less income support to households via the PIT in emerging and developing countries as most low-income earners are not subject to PIT in these economies. More generally, where tax bases are narrow, countries have had less room to provide support or stimulus via the tax system. The size of the informal sector and governments’ administrative capacities have also influenced the scope and form of tax support. Finally, with only a few exceptions, so far announced tax increases have been concentrated in OECD countries, possibly reflecting the fact that they are among the countries that have introduced the most generous support packages.