Fed faces headache, taps epidemiologists in hunt for policy clues
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[March 11, 2020]
By Lindsay Dunsmuir and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The
escalating coronavirus outbreak is giving the U.S. Federal Reserve a
policy headache like never before: how to judge the potential impact on
the economy in the absence of reliable data on how fast the flu-like
illness is spreading across the United States.
The central bank slashed interest rates by half a percentage point a
week ago in a pre-emptive bid to shield the U.S. economy from the
fast-evolving global epidemic. But Fed Chair Jerome Powell also said it
was too early to tell the impact it would have, with most of the data
the Fed typically relies on being too backward-looking to be of use.
Instead, the Fed is turning to new methods to assess the likely spread
and get a read on local responses as policymakers weigh what further
action may be needed in the days and weeks ahead.
"I am talking extensively to epidemiologists and healthcare experts
across the country...to try and interpret what we are seeing and what we
are likely to see," Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan said in Chicago
last week.
For real-time impacts, the Richmond Fed has reached out to city and
county executives "to understand what this might look like in our
cities," research director Kartik Athreya told Reuters on Friday.
Minneapolis Fed economists are monitoring credit card transactions while
San Francisco Fed researchers are now tracking a daily measure of
consumer sentiment published by Morning Consult.
These snapshots could quickly show whether the American consumer, the
engine of U.S. growth, is pulling back. But assessing how long that
could last relies on a good grasp of the outbreak's escalation.
The economic impact "is largely going to depend on how many people are
going to be infected by this...how many people will be able to go to
work, and how many hours they will be able to put into production," said
Arizona State University's Bart Hobijn, who was a Fed economist during
the financial crisis.
For Kaplan, the number of new cases will be a key indicator as he heads
into the central bank's policy meeting on March 17-18, at which he and
his fellow policymakers will have to provide their next set of economic
forecasts.
But an accurate reading remains elusive. The Trump administration has
been criticized for its slow response and the short supply of test kits.
The number of U.S. cases of coronavirus grew to 761 on Tuesday,
including 27 deaths, with fast-growing concentrations in cities like
Seattle, San Francisco and New York.
"Once you have a cluster in a certain city, there's a risk, in light of
the facts here, that you might have many more undiagnosed cases than we
are aware of and there is a risk that those undiagnosed cases will in
turn infect other people," Kaplan noted.
About three-fourths of the 50 U.S. states have now reported infections.
The slow pace of rolling out kits and testing capabilities means that
policymakers will have little concrete evidence about the extent of the
U.S. outbreak ahead of next week's meeting.
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The Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, DC, U.S.,
August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo
"The amount of extra information that they'll have in the next few
days, until these tests are widely available, is going to be
minimal," said Mac Hyman, a professor of mathematics at Tulane
University, who is an expert in epidemic modeling.
Only with more widespread testing to identify cases can experts more
accurately track the disease's likely spread, he said.
Key to the length of the impact is also the extent to which people
are made more aware of how they can become infected and provided
with tools to prevent spreading the virus, from face masks to
disposable gloves.
Global stock markets have tumbled as investors fret about the
coronavirus causing a world recession, and roughly $6 trillion of
U.S. market value has been wiped out so far. Financial markets are
predicting another big interest rate cut over the next week even
though estimates on the hit to the U.S. economy vary widely.
A San Francisco Fed economist on Friday forecast U.S. GDP growth
could dip to about 1.8% this year, only a couple of tenths off
policymakers' estimates before the outbreak took hold. But a
Brookings Institution paper published last week estimated a pandemic
could subtract as much as $1.8 trillion from U.S. GDP this year, a
far greater hit than the Great Recession.
So far, disruption in the United States has been mostly concentrated
in the travel and tourism industries, with flights, concerts and
conferences canceled. Some businesses and universities have told
students to stay home and take classes online. Restrictions, and the
economic toll they take, could rise as the number of U.S infections
increases.
Even if policymakers can glean the speed and scale of the outbreak
and the scope of steps to contain it, that does not mean they can
break through the uncertainty that has gripped markets and the
public.
"Right now, it's fear," said UCLA's Peter Katona, an infectious
disease specialist who has investigated viral outbreaks for the CDC.
"We don't know what the trajectory is. It's anybody's guess and
nobody knows."
(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir and Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns
and Andrea Ricci)
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