Fed says beating pandemic is key, but how will it know things are
better?
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[June 08, 2020]
By Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With a full three
months of responding to a global pandemic under their belt, U.S. Federal
Reserve officials have united around one point: lasting progress on the
economic front will be dictated by success in containing the spread of
the coronavirus.
But agreement beyond that may be elusive as Fed policymakers meet this
week to balance fresh signs the United States may be over the worst of
the economic fallout from the pandemic against evidence the virus is not
yet under control.
A surprise gain of more than 2.5 million U.S. jobs last month will
factor into their debate, as will any hint the surge in employment and
other activity more broadly is accompanied by more transmission of the
novel coronavirus.
Where they end up could shape decisions about whether to expand or
create new emergency programs in anticipation of a more extended
economic crisis, or about how to best support companies and households
if in fact the pandemic is easing.
The U.S. central bank has ongoing debates on each front, both about the
long-run commitments it might make to anchor interest rates at a low
level for the recovery, and the continued hunt, as Fed Chair Jerome
Powell put it last week, for companies with substantial numbers of
employees that have not been covered in any of the crisis programs
launched so far.
The stunning May payrolls data released by the Labor Department on
Friday could temper some of the urgency that has accompanied Fed
meetings since March. [nL1N2DH2GS]
After having cut interest rates to near zero and launched a bevy of
credit programs in a frenzy of emergency meetings in March, no major
policy decisions are expected on Wednesday when the Federal Open Market
Committee ends its latest two-day meeting. It is scheduled to release
its policy statement at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday and Powell is
due to hold a news conference shortly after.
Policymakers, however, will issue economic projections for the first
time since December, before a decade-long economic expansion was snuffed
out by a massive wave of unemployment that followed widespread lockdowns
to stop the spread of COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the
coronavirus.
Projections due in March were shelved because there was so much fog
around the collapsing economy that policymakers felt it pointless to
guess where unemployment, inflation and economic growth were headed.
Three months of data since have verified the scope of the crisis -
unemployment may have fallen in May but remains at a Great
Depression-like 13.3%. And while it does appear the worst in terms of
joblessness may have been reached, Oxford Economics economist Bob
Schwartz cautioned on Friday that "the remarkable turnaround last month
reflected the easy-lifting part of the healing process."
Furthermore, what remains unknown is perhaps what matters most - the
extent to which durable progress has been made in containing a health
crisis in which more than 110,000 Americans have died.
Deaths and the rise in new cases, which had been declining on a moving
average basis, have recently risen. The easing of restrictions on
business and social gatherings, meanwhile, has led to concerns about a
possible wave of new infections. Such fears were heightened late last
month as Americans flocked to beaches and lakes to celebrate the
Memorial Day long weekend.
Two weeks of protests across the nation over the death of George Floyd,
an African-American man who died in police custody in Minneapolis, have
added even more uncertainty in major cities, including some that
seemingly had the virus under control.
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U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks to reporters
after the Federal Reserve cut interest rates in an emergency move
designed to shield the world's largest economy from the impact of
the coronavirus, during a news conference in Washington, U.S., March
3, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
For the Fed, how to make sense of it all has become an
impressionistic test, with policymakers looking at the same set of
information and seeing different trajectories.
Asked about the scenes of Memorial Day revelers at one Missouri lake
resort, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said he thought the
risk of a second large wave of infections was low because of an
expected quick response by health authorities.
"This is not occurring in a vacuum," he told journalists on the
Wednesday after the holiday weekend.
That same day, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said he was
paying particular heed "to congregations happening in ways that ...
will potentially lead to a second wave that induces another
shutdown. If that happens I think there are significant concerns"
about the economic recovery.
CLARITY SLOW IN COMING
The economic projections released on Wednesday will offer a key
insight into how Fed officials see the pandemic's trajectory and
whether they think the economy has hit bottom.
The Fed has not tried to establish its own central system for
monitoring or recreating health data, but pulled extensively from
the publicly available information, consultations with outside
experts, and a massive amount of background reading.
"We are not experts on epidemiology, the spread of pandemics or
anything like that," Powell said in an online event in late May. "We
talk to experts, and the main answer they give you is things are
highly uncertain."
Even experts are struggling over measuring the fight against the
pandemic with testing levels still insufficient to fully describe
how the health crisis is evolving.
In a recent paper, Jeffrey Harris, a physician and economics
professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, noted the
main methods for tracking progress against the virus had all failed
in one jurisdiction or another.
"We will have more than a few problems trying to determine whether
various state governments' efforts to rekindle economic and social
activity have been working or failing," Harris wrote. "Imagine
trying to bring a plane to a soft landing when you don't really know
its altitude or velocity."
The pace for lifting restrictions isn't up to the Fed, and
policymakers say the strength of a recovery will depend on whether
people feel safe again in stores and offices.
A second wave of infections could wreck that process.
The Fed may not know for sure if it's coming, but Powell said late
last month that it would respond if it does.
"There is clearly a risk of a second outbreak, and that would be
challenging," Powell said. "We, of course, would continue to react
... We are not close to any limits."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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