He warned that the next two generations of Filipinos would be paying forthe cost of COVID-19.
According to the official, lockdowns and other restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus have shattered the Southeast Asian nation's economy, leaving millions out of work and many poor families hungry.
The country's long run total cost ofCOVID-19 and the quarantine both to the present and future society will reach 41.4 trillion pesos (810 billion billion USD), Chua said.
According to Chua, currently, nearly 70 percent of the economy,including 23.3 million workers, still have to comply with the strictrestrictions imposed to combat the pandemic. Consumption, investment and tax revenues would struggle to recover as social distancing rules prevent key sectors, such as tourism and restaurants, from fully reopening. Productivity would be lower due to death, illness or lack of schooling during the pandemic.
Chua said the Philippine economy is forecast to grow 4-5 percentthis year, but it would take 10years before the country returned to pre-pandemic growth, which averaged 6.4percent in the 10 years before COVID-19 hit.
Todate, the Philippines has recorded more than 2.5 million COVID-19 cases,including more than 38,000 deaths. Over 25 percent of the country's adultpopulation has been fully vaccinated against COVID-19./.