Trump's COVID orders too little, too late to help U.S.
economy, experts say
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[August 11, 2020] By
Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's
weekend attempt to sidestep stalled congressional negotiations over the
next coronavirus aid package will do little to boost the economy,
experts said.
Trump's executive order and presidential memoranda, introduced on
Saturday, would temporarily extend enhanced unemployment benefits at a
reduced amount of $400 a week, defer payroll taxes for some workers,
suspend federal student loan payments and potentially provide eviction
relief. Even if he can overcome the legal questions surrounding his
actions, the efforts may not pack much punch, economists say.
Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody's Analytics, calculated the
orders could provide just over $400 billion in total relief. JPMorgan
Chase economist Michael Feroli wrote in an email note on Monday that the
initiatives could contribute "less than $100 billion" in stimulus.
That's versus the $1 trillion aid package proposed by the Republican-led
Senate or the more than $3 trillion aid bill passed by the Democrat-led
House of Representatives.
Altogether, the president's orders would add up to 0.2% of GDP, a
"negligible amount," according to estimates from Lydia Boussour, senior
U.S. economist for Oxford Economics.
Millions of jobless Americans could be financially squeezed this month
after the expiration of a $600 weekly supplement to unemployment
benefits, the winding down of eviction moratoriums across the country
and the end of the Paycheck Protection Program, which supported small
businesses.
Some of the measures proposed by Trump would take time to set up and
could be challenged in court, experts said. "They're not going to do
anybody any good in the here and now," Zandi said in an interview.
The president's efforts may also not reach all of the workers relying on
aid. For example, the $400 weekly supplement to unemployment benefits
would only apply to people receiving at least $100 in state unemployment
benefits and could exclude some low-income workers. The added benefits,
which would be financed by $44 billion from the Disaster Relief Fund,
would only last about five or six weeks, Feroli estimates.
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U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) pandemic briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S.,
August 10, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
And the program would put more pressure on states - which have already seen
their budgets strained during the crisis - by requiring them to pay 25% of the
$400 supplement.
A measure that would defer employees' share of the Social Security payroll tax
from September through December is not expected to have a noticeable impact on
spending because it helps people who are still working, wrote Boussour. Workers
would still owe the taxes later.
Trump's policy move on housing may not lead to immediate relief for people who
are falling behind on their rent or mortgage payments.
The president asked the heads of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S.
Treasury to look into ways to provide assistance to renters and homeowners and
to research legal actions that could help to avoid evictions and foreclosures -
rather than spelling out any concrete actions.
The measure that is most likely to become reality is the extension of a freeze
on federal student loan payments, Zandi said. That is set to expire Sept. 30;
Trump's measure would extend it through the end of the year.
The step could save borrowers $15 billion to $20 billion, Zandi estimates. "For
the students that's a big deal, but for the macro economy in a crisis, it's
really not meaningful."
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte; Additional reporting by Brad Heath; Editing by
Heather Timmons and Cynthia Osterman)
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