When Will Your Country Recover from the Pandemic?

What started as a novel virus in China quickly became a sweeping disease that shut down the world and put a 1.5 year halt on the global economy.

But while some countries’ economies are already back to normal, others are lagging far behind.

COVID-19 Recovery Timelines, by OECD Country

This chart using data from the OECD anticipates when countries will economically recover from the global pandemic, based on getting back to pre-pandemic levels of GDP per capita.

Note: The categorization of ‘advanced’ or ‘emerging’ economy was determined by OECD standards.

covid-19 recovery time by country

Can I share this graphic?
Yes. Visualizations are free to share and post in their original form across the web—even for publishers. Please link back to this page and attribute Visual Capitalist.
When do I need a license?
Licenses are required for some commercial uses, translations, or layout modifications. You can even whitelabel our visualizations. Explore your options.
Interested in this piece?
Click here to license this visualization.

a.bg-showmore-plg-link:hover,a.bg-showmore-plg-link:active,a.bg-showmore-plg-link:focus{color:#0071bb;}

The Leaders of the Pack

At the top, China and the U.S. are recovering at breakneck speed. In fact, recovering is the wrong word for China, as they reached pre-pandemic GDP per capita levels just after Q2’2020.

On the other end, some countries are looking at years—not months—when it comes to their recovery date. Saudi Arabia isn’t expected to recover until after Q1’2024, and Argentina is estimated to have an even slower recovery, occurring only after Q2’2026.

Country Recovery Economy
🇧🇪 Belgium After Q4 2022 Advanced
🇸🇪 Sweden After Q4 2021 Advanced
🇸🇰 Slovakia After Q4 2021 Advanced
🇳🇿 New Zealand After Q4 2021 Advanced
🇩🇪 Germany After Q4 2021 Advanced
🇪🇪 Estonia After Q4 2021 Advanced
🇩🇰 Denmark After Q4 2021 Advanced
🇮🇸 Iceland After Q3 2023 Advanced
🇸🇮 Slovenia After Q3 2022 Advanced
🇵🇹 Portugal After Q3 2022 Advanced
🇫🇷 France After Q3 2022 Advanced
🇦🇹 Austria After Q3 2022 Advanced
🇵🇱 Poland After Q3 2021 Advanced
🇳🇴 Norway After Q3 2021 Advanced
🇱🇺 Luxembourg After Q3 2021 Advanced
🇱🇻 Latvia After Q3 2021 Advanced
🇯🇵 Japan After Q3 2021 Advanced
🇫🇮 Finland After Q3 2021 Advanced
🇪🇸 Spain After Q2 2023 Advanced
🇬🇧 United Kingdom After Q2 2022 Advanced
🇳🇱 Netherlands After Q2 2022 Advanced
🇮🇹 Italy After Q2 2022 Advanced
🇬🇷 Greece After Q2 2022 Advanced
🇨🇿 Czech Republic After Q2 2022 Advanced
🇨🇦 Canada After Q2 2022 Advanced
🇺🇸 United States After Q2 2021 Advanced
🇰🇷 South Korea After Q2 2021 Advanced
🇮🇪 Ireland After Q2 2021 Advanced
🇨🇭 Switzerland After Q1 2022 Advanced
🇮🇱 Israel After Q1 2022 Advanced
🇭🇺 Hungary After Q1 2022 Advanced
🇦🇺 Australia After Q1 2022 Advanced
🇱🇹 Lithuania After Q1 2021 Advanced
🇿🇦 South Africa After Q4 2022 Emerging
🇮🇩 Indonesia After Q4 2021 Emerging
🇮🇳 India After Q4 2021 Emerging
🇲🇽 Mexico After Q3 2023 Emerging
🇨🇴 Colombia After Q3 2022 Emerging
🇧🇷 Brazil After Q3 2022 Emerging
🇨🇱 Chile After Q3 2021 Emerging
🇹🇷 Turkey After Q3 2020 Emerging
🇦🇷 Argentina After Q2 2026 Emerging
🇨🇷 Costa Rica After Q2 2023 Emerging
🇷🇺 Russia After Q2 2021 Emerging
🇨🇳 China After Q2 2020 Emerging
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia After Q1 2024 Emerging

Most countries will hit pre-pandemic levels of GDP per capita by the end of 2022. The slowest recovering advanced economies—Iceland and Spain—aren’t expected to bounce back until 2023.

Four emerging economies are speeding ahead, and are predicted to get back on their feet by the end of this year or slightly later (if they haven’t already):

  • 🇷🇺 Russia: after Q2’2021
  • 🇨🇱 Chile: after Q3’2021
  • 🇮🇳 India: after Q4’2021
  • 🇮🇩 Indonesia: after Q4’2021

However, no recovery is guaranteed, and many countries will continue face setbacks as waves of COVID-19 variants hit—India, for example, was battling its biggest wave as recently as May 2021.

Trailing Behind

Why are some countries recovering faster than others? One factor seems to be vaccination rates.

Country Doses Administered per 100 People Total Doses Administered Percent of Population Fully Vaccinated
World 47 3,573,004,544
🇦🇪 U.A.E. 166 16,194,526 69%
🇲🇹 Malta 143 718,418 71%
🇧🇭 Bahrain 136 2,224,916 63%
🇮🇸 Iceland 129 466,434 70%
🇺🇾 Uruguay 129 4,458,394 58%
🇨🇱 Chile 128 24,248,545 60%
🇦🇼 Aruba 125 133,421 59%
🇶🇦 Qatar 123 3,474,944 56%
🇬🇧 United Kingdom 122 81,438,892 53%
Mongolia 121 3,912,996 56%
Israel 121 10,959,633 58%
Canada 118 44,293,659 48%
Singapore 113 6,440,735 42%
Belgium 111 12,700,513 46%
Curaçao 108 170,857 51%
Denmark 108 6,266,892 43%
Maldives 106 561,748 46%
Netherlands 105 18,273,238 43%
Spain 105 49,585,197 49%
Hungary 104 10,155,466 54%
Portugal 103 10,579,259 44%
Luxembourg 102 633,974 41%
Germany 102 84,989,850 45%
China 102 1,426,347,000
United States 101 336,054,953 48%
Ireland 101 4,995,719 44%
Austria 100 8,866,474 44%
Italy 99 59,966,908 41%
Switzerland 95 8,133,486 42%
France 93 62,321,355 40%
Sweden 93 9,536,164 36%
Finland 90 4,951,925 26%
Norway 89 4,785,937 31%
Greece 89 9,560,592 42%
Lithuania 88 2,459,605 42%
Czech Republic 88 9,346,397 38%
Poland 85 32,413,199 42%
Dominican Rep. 84 9,066,151 34%
Estonia 79 1,049,416 34%
Serbia 78 5,415,434 38%
Slovenia 78 1,626,072 36%
Cyprus 76 916,819 35%
Turkey 74 61,747,399 23%
Slovakia 73 4,003,639 33%
Mauritius 71 901,530 24%
Croatia 71 2,870,866 32%
Macau 69 434,726 27%
Cuba 69 7,767,601 17%
Latvia 66 1,264,433 33%
Bhutan 64 487,060 0.02%
Saudi Arabia 63 21,556,314 9.2%
Hong Kong 62 4,638,908 26%
Barbados 59 168,955 25%
Argentina 58 26,134,815 11%
Brazil 57 120,726,752 16%
Kuwait 56 2,375,455 22%
Morocco 56 20,584,812 26%
Cambodia 56 9242925 24%
El Salvador 53 3,422,214 20%
Japan 53 66,714,528 20%
Costa Rica 52 2,606,791 16%
French Polynesia 51 141,523 24%
Montenegro 49 304,655 23%
Fiji 47 419,998 8%
Romania 47 9,092,141 24%
Guyana 46 363,442 16%
Colombia 45 22,624,568 19%
Jordan 45 4,498,748 18%
Azerbaijan 42 4,242,727 17%
Panama 42 1,781,542 15%
Mexico 41 52,704,960 17%
Malaysia 41 13,107,681 13%
South Korea 41 21,157,612 12%
New Caledonia 40 115,218 19%
Ecuador 40 6,890,876 10%
Kazakhstan 39 7,303,180 14%
Suriname 38 222,377 8%
Australia 38 9,631,807 10%
Belize 38 147,080 10%
Albania 37 1,052,108 16%
Russia 35 50,383,638 14%
Oman 35 1,728,618 6%
North Macedonia 34 713,114 13%
Samoa 32 62,161 4.7%
Moldova 31 834,527 13%
Grenada 31 35,072 13%
Peru 31 9,954,429 12%
Saint Lucia 30 54,361 13%
Sri Lanka 29 6,431,100 7.3%
India 29 391,340,491 6%
New Zealand 29 1,404,343 11%
Brunei 28 121,241 4.3%
Tonga 27 28,667
Bulgaria 27 1,896,574 12%
Bolivia 27 3,117,521 7%
Trinidad and Tobago 27 375,924 11%
Bahamas 25 97,992 10%
Lebanon 25 1,693,164 9%
Laos 24 1,708,981 9%
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 23 25,509
Cape Verde 23 124,958 3%
Timor-Leste 22 281,283 3%
Indonesia 21 55,819,781 6%
Equatorial Guinea 21 279,112 9%
West Bank & Gaza 20 958,519 9%
Thailand 19 13,533,717 5%
Taiwan 19 4,603,639 1%
Tunisia 19 2,206,980 6%
São Tomé and Príncipe 18 37,716 5%
Bosnia and Herzegovina 14 470,218 5%
Venezuela 14 4,000,000 4%
Nepal 13 3,730,344 4%
Philippines 13 14,074,514 4%
Botswana 12 284,676 5%
Honduras 12 1,172,830 1%
Paraguay 12 826,642 2%
Belarus
Zimbabwe 11 1,575,539 4%
Comoros 11 90,880
Uzbekistan 11 3,541,442 4%
Pakistan 10 2,166,0650 2%
Jamaica 9.8 290,382 4%
Armenia 8.8 260,813 2%
Ukraine 8.8 3,899,890 3%
Iran 7.9 6,530,124 3%
Georgia 7.8 289,399 3%
South Africa 7.7 4,535,222 3%
Guatemala 6.9 1,146,477 1%
Namibia 6.7 166,616 1%
Myanmar 6.5* 3,500,000
Libya 6.3 425,119
Bangladesh 6.2 10,108,224 3%
Guinea 6 770,688 2%
Algeria
Eswatini 5.2 60,069 2%
Rwanda 5.1 646,909 2%
Senegal 5.1 823,610 2%
Angola 4.9 1,558,201 2%
Egypt 4.8 4,851,349 1%
Vanuatu 4.7 14,026
Vietnam 4.3 4,185,623 0.3%
Togo
Tajikistan 4.3 397,694 0.2%
Ghana 4.2 1,265,306 1%
Mauritania 4 182,642 0.3%
Solomon Islands 3.8 25,628 1%
Ivory Coast 3.3 861,278
Gabon 3.3 72,351 1%
Republic of the Congo 3 163,742
Kenya 2.9 1,550,389 1%
Sierra Leone 2.9 225,380 0.2%
Iraq 2.8 1,087,866 1%
Djibouti 2.8 26,796
Afghanistan 2.7 1,024,168 1%
Kyrgyzstan 2.7 173,700 1.%
Lesotho 2.7 56,322 1%
Nicaragua
Uganda 2.4 1,079,943
Malawi 2.3 428,407 0.2%
Nigeria 2 3,938,945 1%
Liberia 1.9 95,423 0.2%
Ethiopia 1.9 2,090,997
Gambia 1.9 43,557 1%
Niger 1.8 423,335 0.3%
Mozambique 1.7 508,184 1%
Central African Republic 1.7 78,685
Somalia 1.6 249,790 1%
Sudan 1.6 677,957 0.3%
Zambia 1.4 243,818 0.3%
Guinea-Bissau 1.3 25,012 0.1%
Yemen 1 297,405 <0.1%
Mali 1 196,862 0.3%
Syria 0.8 131,221 0.1%
Madagascar 0.7 197,001
Turkmenistan
Cameroon 0.6 163,921 0.1%
Papua New Guinea 0.6 51,170 <0.1%
South Sudan 0.5 55,915 <0.1%
Benin 0.4 52,563 0.1%
Burkina Faso 0.2 33,960 <0.1%
Chad 0.2 24,459 <0.1%
Congo 0.1 73,764 <0.1%

As of July 16th, 2021.

The higher the rate of vaccination, the harder it is for COVID-19 to spread. This gives countries a chance to loosen restrictions, let people get back to work and regular life, and fuel the economy. Additionally, the quicker vaccines are rolled out, the less time there is for variants to mutate.

Another factor is the overall strength of a country’s healthcare infrastructure. More advanced economies often have more ICU capacity, more efficient dissemination of public health information, and, simply, more hospital staff. These traits help better handle the pandemic, with reduced cases, less restrictions, and a speedy recovery.

Finally, the level of government support and fiscal stimulus injected into different economies has determined how swiftly they’ve recovered. Similar to the disparity in vaccine rollouts, there was a significant fiscal stimulus gap, especially during the heat of the pandemic.

Recovering to Normal?

Many experts and government leaders are now advocating for funneling more money into healthcare infrastructure and disease research preventatively. The increased funding now would help stop worldwide shut downs and needless loss of life in future.

Time will tell when we return to “normal” everywhere, however, normal will likely never be the same. Many impacts of the global pandemic will stay with us over the long term.

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *