Fed meeting may give clues to coronavirus-era jobs plans
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[September 14, 2020] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Eight years ago, as
the United States struggled through the aftermath of a deep recession,
the Federal Reserve set an unemployment rate it felt would be a good
benchmark to show the economy was getting back to normal.
The 6.5% number the Fed set in 2012 was almost double the unemployment
rate the U.S. eventually hit https://br.reuters.com/article/us-usa-economy-idUSKBN1WJ0C4
during a record-setting economic expansion, leaving many convinced the
Fed had misjudged the willingness of those on the economic sidelines to
get back to work.
This week, the Fed will revive that debate under drastically different
circumstances as it begins to put into practice a revised approach to
monetary policy at its meeting on Sept. 15 and 16. Mistakes about job
creation are a thing of the past, the Fed is promising, with an
expansive commitment to "broad-based and inclusive" employment announced
in late August.
What's unclear is just what the Fed plans to do to speed a return to
full employment for the nearly 30 million Americans collecting some form
of unemployment benefit, and when it will pull the trigger. The issues
are consequential to Wall Street investors, businesses large and small,
masses of jobless in America, and possibly the November presidential
election.
This week's meeting won't provide those answers. But there should be
clues from the new economic projections that Fed officials will issue
after their meeting, the last before the November election, and from the
press conference chair Jerome Powell holds afterward.
The Fed may eventually buy more bonds, offer more detailed promises to
keep credit easy for years to come, or even take more aggressive steps
if the pandemic worsens and conditions deteriorate.
To veterans of those earlier policy debates about maximum employment, it
can't happen soon enough.
Despite the new employment commitments, lending programs and low
interest rates rolled out in response to the pandemic this spring, "we
are settling in for another long painful recovery where some people are
feeling great because they own lots of stock and others lost their job,"
said Dartmouth College economics professor and former Fed adviser Andrew
Levin.
"It is deja vu" with the last U.S. recovery, he said.
New economic projections this week will offer the first, longer-term
glimpse, through 2023, of how Fed officials think their new approach
will work in practice and how fast they think the job market can
recover.
The formal unemployment rate of 8.4% in August is already below what
most Fed officials felt it would be at year's end. But it also may
understate the real economic impact the coronavirus has had on
households.
This week should reveal whether Fed officials think the pace of
improvement will continue, and how that shapes their view of the
recovery.
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The Federal Reserve building is set against a blue sky, amid the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Washington, U.S., May 1,
2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
WORSE THAN THE LAST RECESSION
It took six and a half years for the U.S. to reclaim the 8.7 million payroll
jobs lost during the 2007 to 2009 downturn. The coronavirus recession was deeper
and faster, with 22 million payroll positions lost.
The rebound started strong, but there are concerns it is slowing and may leave
people struggling in a post-pandemic economy where millions of jobs may have
been rendered obsolete.
The Fed's future decisions and deliberations will likely reflect new views of
the labor market, developed during the last downturn and recovery.
Levin, for example, was among a group of economists who argued that workers who
appeared permanently sidelined might return to jobs if unemployment fell low
enough. The issue may again be relevant if some industries and occupations, as
expected, are fundamentally changed as a result of the pandemic.
Evidence of such structural changes can take time. Though Levin proved correct,
it took years before sidelined workers' return showed up in the data. Some feel
the Fed's reduction of economic stimulus and hiking of interest rates in the
meantime slowed the arrival of the day when the recovery reached those most
marginalized -- the people the Fed is now pledging to more directly account for
in its thinking.
U.S. central bankers say they have learned their lesson. They have revised their
approach so that the risk, say, of rising inflation will no longer be used as a
reason to raise interest rates and slow job creation - until it is clearly
necessary.
In the expansion that lasted until the coronavirus "we did find full
employment," San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly said in recent comments to
reporters. "We were learning to find it experientially" by letting joblessness
drop below what was considered sustainable without inflation.
That is the Fed's intent for the future. Those on the outside are hungry for
more details.
“What the Fed has told us is they are no longer going to even pretend to be
anticipatory," raising rates to halt inflation before it starts, said Erik
Weisman, chief economist with MFS Investment Management. "We are going to want a
lot more specificity."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider.; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by
Heather Timmons and Chizu Nomiyama)
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