Fiscal fizzle saps U.S. economic recovery, a possible
boost to Biden
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[September 19, 2020] By
Ann Saphir
(Reuters) - This week's economic data
offers fresh hints that the U.S. recovery will slow without new federal
aid, a possible blow to President Donald Trump's reelection bid,
especially since any new spending before the Nov. 3 presidential
election seems unlikely.
A slowdown in U.S. consumer spending in August provided the clearest
evidence this week that as millions of Americans lost the extra
unemployment benefits that had sustained their finances in the early
months of the COVID-19 recession, they have begun to cut back.
In an economy where consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of the
total output, less shopping means less overall growth.
The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment dropped less
than expected, and applications for the week before were revised up,
suggesting the labor market recovery has plateaued.
Meanwhile, a Fed survey released Friday showed that American households
were better off financially in July than they were in the first months
of the crisis, in large part because of their access to government aid.
Other data this week indicate the recovery is ongoing in some parts of
the economy.
U.S. factory production increased for a fourth straight month in August,
and confidence rose to a record among single-family homebuilders, who
saw a boost to demand from low interest rates and pandemic-fueled demand
for homes suited to remote work.
Broad consumer sentiment also picked up in September, a report showed
Friday. Democrats grew more upbeat about the economy's outlook while
Republicans' enthusiasm dipped, but overall consumer optimism is still
down compared with before the crisis.
STIMULUS IS COMING, EVENTUALLY
Next week Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to address
lawmakers at three separate hearings, where he will undoubtedly make the
same observation he has repeatedly made for months, including after this
week's policymaking meeting: more stimulus "is likely to be needed" for
the recovery to continue.
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Democratic U.S. presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe
Biden delivers remarks in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., September 16,
2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The House, controlled by Democrats, and the Senate, controlled by Republicans,
are deadlocked on any stimulus bill, and there's little chance of it passing
before the election.
Eventually, Congress will pass some pandemic relief, no matter who wins the
presidential contest. But it's likely to be less under Trump, a Republican, than
under Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.
"If Trump wins and (Republicans) retain control of the Senate and the president
says he wants more stimulus, Republicans will find a way to go along with that,"
said Eric Winograd, senior economist at AllianceBernstein. "If Biden wins, you
would get bigger stimulus."
Goldman Sachs economists said they would likely boost their fourth-quarter GDP
forecast if Biden wins and Democrats retake the U.S. Senate, because Democrats
would approve a spending package larger than the $1 trillion Goldman has
penciled in.
VOTERS FOCUSED ON VIRUS
Despite overall concerns about the strength of the recovery, and millions out of
work since the pandemic hit, a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 45% of
U.S. adults think Trump is the better candidate for rebuilding the economy.
That's compared with 36% who say Biden would be better.
But the same poll showed that likely voters were much more concerned about a
candidate's ability to fight the coronavirus and restore trust in government,
both issues on which voters gave Biden a lead.
COVID-19 has killed more than 197,000 in the United States since the pandemic
began. New daily cases are now averaging about 40,000, about 60% of the July
peak.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir with reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Heather
Timmons and Andrea Ricci)
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