Fed officials worry about lasting economic scars from
crisis
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[May 02, 2020] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After rolling out
trillions of dollars in support for the U.S. economy during the
coronavirus pandemic, Federal Reserve officials have begun warning of
potentially lasting scars to the workforce and productivity if the
recovery is not handled well.
In separate comments on Friday, the heads of three Fed regional banks
said the aggressive efforts already taken to keep companies and firms
afloat are only the start of what will be required to get the economy
back to normal, with worker retraining, retooled social safety nets, and
other steps needed once the health crisis eases.
"We need to be working on the economy's recovery rate" after the crisis,
said Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin, noting that companies may be
operating less efficiently under social distancing rules, business
investment may be hampered by eroded confidence, and workers may pull
back from the labor market as they rethink how to care for children and
aging parents in an era when day care facilities and nursing homes pose
higher risks.
Barkin spoke amid a patchwork end to the coronavirus-spurred lockdowns
that has seen some states throw open their economies already and others
maintain restrictions, while companies and their employees struggle to
find the right balance. Workers that remain on the job face risks - meat
processing plants have been forced offline due to outbreaks among
workers - while companies that do reopen likely face higher costs and
fewer customers.
"We will return to somewhat normal operations - at a gradual pace,"
Barkin told the Maryland Chamber of Commerce in a webcast. But "I worry
about the landing spot - how strong the economy will be at the end of
this."
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard and Dallas Fed President Robert
Kaplan expressed similar concerns that the path out of the crisis may be
both slow and complex.
Not only will the unemployment rate spike to catastrophic levels as high
as 20% in the coming months, for example, but it will likely remain high
until the end of the year or longer, Kaplan said in an interview on Fox
Business Network.
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Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Robert Kaplan speaks during an
interview in his office at the bank's headquarters in Dallas, Texas,
U.S. January 9, 2020. REUTERS/ Ann Saphir/File Photo
"We’re going to end the year probably with an unemployment rate as high as 8 to
10%," Kaplan said, a figure that would mean perhaps 10 million more unemployed
over the next several months compared to the start of the year. "We’re going to
need stimulus going into the rest of the year and into next year so we grow
faster, so we work down this unemployment rate."
That stands in contrast to initial hopes for an economic rebound as swift and
historic as the decline of recent weeks.
'DEPRESSION RISK'
The Fed this week restated a pledge to keep interest rates low and continue
offering trillions of dollars in credit across the economy as long as is needed
to keep it stable during the fight against a pandemic that has killed more than
62,000 people across the country.
But that may just be the beginning of a struggle that will require critical
policy choices about how and what to reopen, what health protections are needed
to keep the virus contained, and how to offset whatever financial or other
wounds emerge.
Bullard, in a Wall Street Journal interview, said he worried about the prospect
of an economic depression if both the shutdown goes on too long and the
reopening is not handled well.
"I think we are taking depression risk here if we are not careful and if we
don't execute this properly over the next couple of months," Bullard said,
suggesting a "far more granular, far more risk-based" approach to the timing of
states or industries coming back online.
"You can hit the pause button on the U.S. economy, but if you try to keep it on
pause for too long, too many other problems will start to accrue and you'll
start to get lots of bankruptcies and lots of business failures," Bullard said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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