Business Daily Media

Men's Weekly

.

Report Reveals Hidden Economic Burden of COVID-19 in Asia Pacific

Estimated indirect and direct costs in Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan suggest ongoing Gross Domestic Product (GDP) burdens of between 0.6% to 1.6% with the potential to balloon to 2.2% to 5.5% if COVID-19 conditions worsen.

SINGAPORE - Media OutReach - 8 May 2023 - MSD (tradename of Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, N.J., USA (NYSE: MRK) released an analysis [1] today that suggests up to 96% of the total ongoing economic cost of COVID-19 in markets in Asia Pacific is due to indirect costs, rather than direct healthcare costs.

The report, titled A Neglected Burden: The Ongoing Economic Costs of COVID-19 in Australia, Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, and Hong Kong, assumes that if current conditions continue, potential ongoing economic costs of COVID-19 could range from 0.6% to 1.6% of GDP.[2] Based on the commonly used cost-of-illness approach, the analysis of the five markets suggests that should the COVID-19 situation worsen, the projected economic burden may reach 2.2% to 5.5% of GDP. This could amount to an annual cost ranging from USD 11.8 billion in Singapore to as much as USD 92.7 billion in South Korea.

Should the current conditions prevail, the total annual economic costs of COVID-19 are estimated to be around: USD 2.6 billion (0.6% of GDP) in Singapore, USD 5.3 billion (1.4% of GDP) in Hong Kong, USD 7.6 billion (0.9% of GDP) in Taiwan, USD 17.0 billion in Australia (1.0% of GDP) and USD 27.5 billion (1.6% of GDP) in South Korea.

The analysis used a similar approach to that of the One Billion Days Lost analysis recently published by McKinsey & Company to evaluate the economic costs of COVID-19 on the US labor force. [3] Two types of cost were assessed: direct costs of illness, such as those incurred by health systems in operating treatment facilities; and indirect costs, such as productivity losses due to missed work.

Impact of indirect costs on economies

In all five markets studied, indirect costs exerted most of the economic burden currently and in future projections. How the infection rates and disease severity[4] change in future will markedly affect the economic costs. The indirect costs estimated in this evaluation are likely to remain high even with a transition from the pandemic to endemic phase of COVID-19. Indirect costs are attributed to productivity losses, which include missed work from sick individuals, as well as knock-on impact on care for dependents such as children and the elderly.

Uneven impact on different segments

The report also highlighted the uneven distribution of costs across three different segments within each market studied: vulnerable populations; individuals affected by long COVID; and workforces of critical industries.

The analysis revealed that vulnerable populations such as those over 60 to 65 years, and adults under 60 with one or more comorbidities such as high blood pressure, cancer, and diabetes were likely to be disproportionately impacted. In Australia and Taiwan, indigenous communities were more susceptible to severe COVID-19 due to high rates of chronic illness and inequalities faced in accessing health services.

Meanwhile, individuals affected by long COVID experience prolonged productivity losses (increasing indirect costs) and reliance on health services (increasing direct costs). This in turn exerts a substantial burden on the health system, both in terms of capacity requirement and economic costs.

Across all five markets, the health workforce is impacted by high levels of absenteeism and a risk of infection greater than that of the wider community. This has consequences for health system capacity and quality of care. Travel and tourism, as well as logistics sectors have also been heavily impacted due to workforce shortages.

"A view of the full economic cost imposed by COVID-19 is useful in decision-making and priority-setting as the Asia Pacific region transitions to endemic living with COVID-19. In particular, countermeasures to mitigate the economic costs of COVID-19 are crucial to managing these costs and ensuring that markets are adequately prepared for all eventualities, including a potential 'Pandemic 2.0'[5] scenario." said David Peacock, President Asia Pacific, MSD.

The report also reviews potential policy countermeasures that could mitigate the ongoing and future economic impact of COVID-19. These include community measures such as contact tracing and mask-wearing mandates, other infection control strategies, or medical responses like vaccines and therapeutics. Policymakers who strengthen their toolkit of countermeasures will be in a stronger position to ease the high costs of the continuing pandemic, ensuring populations and economies are equipped to better manage future health challenges.

Annex A: Estimated economic burdens

The estimated economic burdens across Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan are outlined in two scenarios below. The base case scenario assumes that current conditions prevail while the Pandemic 2.0 scenario assumes worsening transmission rates [6]:


Base Case 2022
(current infection rate and severity of disease)
Pandemic 2.0
(high infection rate and severity of disease)

Total Cost[7],[8]
(p.a.)
Direct Cost
(p.a.)
Indirect Cost
(p.a.)
Total Cost
(p.a.)
Direct Cost
(p.a.)
Indirect Cost
(p.a.)
Australia
AUD 25.3 billion

(USD 17.0 billion)
AUD 2.8 billion

(USD 1.9 billion)
AUD 22.5 billion

(USD 15.1 billion)
AUD 56.1 billion

(USD 37.8 billion)
AUD 4.4 billion

(USD 2.9 billion)
AUD 51.7 billion

(USD 34.8 billion)
Hong Kong
HKD 41.6 billion

(USD 5.3 billion)
HKD 5.1 billion

(USD 646 million)
HKD 36.6 billion

(USD 4.7 billion)
HKD 108.7 billion

(USD 13.8 billion)
HKD 12.0 billion

(USD 1.5 billion)
HKD 96.7 billion

(USD 12.3 billion)
Singapore
SGD 3.6 billion

(USD 2.6 billion)
SGD 142 million

(USD 105 million)
SGD 3.4 billion

(USD 2.5 billion)
SGD 16.0 billion

(USD 11.8 billion)
SGD 863 million

(USD 640 million)
SGD 15.1 billion

(USD 11.2 billion)
South Korea
KRW 36.21 trillion

(USD 27.5 billion)
KRW 1.51 trillion

(USD 1.1 billion)
KRW 34.70 trillion

(USD 26.4 billion)
KRW 121.96 trillion

(USD 92.7 billion)
KRW 7.63 trillion

(USD 5.8 billion)
KRW 114.33 trillion

(USD 86.9 billion)
Taiwan
TWD 233.9 billion

(USD 7.6 billion)
TWD 32.9 billion

(USD 1.1 billion)
TWD 199.9 billion

(USD 6.5 billion)
TWD 573.2 billion

(USD 18.7 billion)
TWD 53.6 billion

(USD 1.7 billion)
TWD 519.7 billion

(USD 16.9 billion)




[1] All figures in this release have been derived from the report: A Neglected Burden: The Ongoing Economic Costs of COVID-19 in Australia, Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, and Hong Kong, 2023 May 5. Available from: http://www.covid19economicimpact.com/

[2] Variations in economic costs across the five markets were primarily driven by the number of infections, GDP and average monthly wages, quarantine periods driving volumes of missed work and the relative cost of healthcare delivery.

[3] McKinsey & Company. One billion days lost: How COVID-19 is hurting the US workforce. 2023 Jan 9 [accessed 2023 March 6]. Available from: https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/healthcare/our-insights/one-billion-days-lost-how-covid-19-is-hurting-the-us-workforce

[4] Infection rate is measured by cases per million population per year while disease severity is measured by resulting hospitalization rate.

[5] The widely recognized cost-of-illness approach allows for estimates under three possible scenarios: a lower-estimate scenario, a base case scenario where current conditions continue, and a higher-estimate Pandemic 2.0 scenario. The analysis considers direct costs of the disease, such as healthcare costs, as well as indirect costs – i.e., productivity losses due to missed work.

[6] The Pandemic 2.0 scenario assumes worsening transmission rates resulting in about two to three times the number of infections per year, compared with the base case, and a severity that results in two to six times the number of hospitalizations compared to the base case.

[7] USD currency exchange rate conversions via Google Finance as at 28 February 2023 (USD 1 = AUD 1.4861 = HKD 7.8493 = KRW 1,322 = SGD 1.3484 = TWD 30.6608): (google.com)

[8] Millions rounded to the nearest whole. Billions rounded to 1 decimal place. Trillions rounded to 2 decimal places.

Hashtag: #MSD

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

About MSD

At MSD, known as Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, N.J., USA in the United States and Canada, we are unified around our purpose: We use the power of leading-edge science to save and improve lives around the world. For more than 130 years, we have brought hope to humanity through the development of important medicines and vaccines. We aspire to be the premier research-intensive biopharmaceutical company in the world – and today, we are at the forefront of research to deliver innovative health solutions that advance the prevention and treatment of diseases in people and animals. We foster a diverse and inclusive global workforce and operate responsibly every day to enable a safe, sustainable and healthy future for all people and communities. For more information, visit and connect with us on , and .

News from Asia

Tenchijin Named Finalist for IVS2025 LAUNCHPAD

Exhibiting at IVS Startup Market to Showcase Advanced Water DX Solutions TOKYO, JAPAN - Media OutReach Newswire - 30 June 2025 - Tenchijin Inc...

ESET and Canon Extends Regional Alliance to Combat Asia’s Security Challenges

SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 30 June 2025 – ESET Asia Pte. Ltd. ("ESET"), a global leader in cybersecurity, and Canon Singapore Pte. Ltd. ("Canon") today announced the signing of a Memora...

Counterfeit and Refurbished Transducers Pose Serious Safety Risks

Merz Aesthetics® Hong Kong Launches Ultherapy® Authenticity Verification Reward Program This August Consumers Urged to Verify Ultherapy® Transducers Authenticity for Safe and Effective Treatments H...

Porsche Design Tower Bangkok and Curvistan Bangkok Host an Exclusive Preview of the "Electrifying Past. Present. Future." Exhibition

BANGKOK, THAILAND - Media OutReach Newswire - 28 April 2025 - Porsche Design Tower Bangkok showcased its commitment to innovation by hosting an exclusive evening reception with Curvistan Bangkok, ...

Hong Kong: Bridging Business Opportunities under the Belt and Road Initiative

HONG KONG SAR - Media OutReach Newswire - 30 June 2025 - As a global trade and financial centre and a key link in the Belt and Road Initiative (B&RI), Hong Kong plays a pivotal role in connect...

Octa Black: Octa broker's premium trading experience

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Media OutReach Newswire - 1 July 2025 - Octa, a globally regulated and trusted broker since 2011, rewards its high-value clients in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Nigeria with a...

Gaw Capital Appoints Nicholas Toh as Managing Director – Head of Data Centre Platform, Asia (Ex-China)

SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire – 1 July 2025 – Gaw Capital Partners, a leading multi-asset investment management firm, is pleased to announce the appointment of Mr. Nicholas Toh as Managin...

Prime Immigration Consultancy Announces Expansion of Service Offerings to Help Clients Achieve the Singapore Dream

SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 1 July 2025 - Prime Immigration Consultancy (PIC), a Singapore-based immigration consultancy, has announced an expansion of its services to provide more comp...

ICONSIAM in Collaboration with Shanghai Yuyuan Tourist Mart Group Brings China’s Most Iconic Lantern Festival to Thailand for the First Time

“Yuyuan Lantern Festival 2025” Lights Up Bangkok to Celebrate 50 Years of Thai–Chinese Diplomatic Ties BANGKOK, THAILAND - Media OutReach Newswire - 1 July 2025 - ICONSIAM, the global landmark al...

SIBUR to expand cooperation with clients in Bangladesh

MOSCOW, RUSSIA - Media OutReach Newswire - 1 July 2025 - SIBUR, Russia's largest producer of polymers and synthetic rubbers, sees potential to increase supplies to Bangladesh following the launch ...

Demand for Home Batteries surges as Federal Rebate Kicks In

A leading provider of energy solutions VoltX Energy has seen a 400% increase in demand for home batteries in the past three weeks as people put d...

Why Sport Remains the Safest Bet in an Uncertain World

When Rome was in crisis, its leaders did not retreat to the Senate. They went to the circus. To the chariot races. To the gladiators. Sport was no...

THE FINE LINE WITHIN HILARIOUS SIGNAGE DESIGN FAILS

It seems like design failures still occur in today’s modern branding era, despite rigorous rounds of approvals behind the scenes. One signage show...

Deputy Announces Exclusive Global Partnership with Predelo to Bring AI to Shift-Based Businesses

Deputy, the global people platform for shift-based businesses, has announced an exclusive partnership with Predelo, an AI Decision Agent-as-a-Serv...

Leftover Budget? The Last-Minute EOFY Tip to Drive Business Success in FY25/26

The countdown is on. With just days left until EOFY, now’s the time to make your remaining 2024–2025 budget work harder and smarter. After workin...

pay.com.au appoints new CEO and Managing Director

The former COO will lead the company’s next growth phase, with ex-CEO Edward Alder transitioning into the role of Managing Director AUSTRALIA, 25...

Sell by LayBy