In nod to Delta variant, Fed moves Jackson Hole meet online
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[August 21, 2021] By
Ann Saphir and Howard Schneider
(Reuters) - The Federal Reserve Bank of
Kansas City said on Friday its annual economic symposium in Jackson
Hole, Wyoming, will take place on Aug. 27 virtually and not in person as
planned, the clearest sign yet of the impact of the COVID-19 Delta
variant on the Fed's plans.
"While we are disappointed that health conditions will prevent us from
being able to gather in person at the Jackson Lake Lodge this year as we
had planned, the safety of our guests and the Teton County community is
our priority," said Kansas City Fed President Esther George in a
statement, citing the recently elevated COVID-19 health risk level in
Teton County.
Under the county's guidelines, people should not gather with non-family
members or host in-person social activities.
The reversal raises questions about the Fed's broader assessment of the
Delta variant's economic impact, which Chair Jerome Powell and other
policymakers have mostly played down, saying that businesses and
households have learned to live with the virus.

"It certainly is going to be a communications challenge" for Powell to
stick to the view of only minor impact from the recent surge when he'll
be giving his highly anticipated speech on the economic outlook to an
online-only audience," said Yale School of Management's Steven Kelly.
Or, as Grant Thornton Chief Economist Diane Swonk quipped on Twitter, "I
think the tenor of @federalreserve Powell's comments just shifted a bit
on the economic outlook."
At their meeting last week, Fed policymakers began coalescing around a
plan to begin to reduce their support for the economy before the end of
the year, as long as the labor market continued to improve as expected.
The Delta variant, however, is raising questions around that. Earlier on
Friday, Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan, who backs a plan to start
trimming the Fed's economy-bolstering bond purchases by October, said he
was already seeing some signs of the rising caseloads' impact on hiring
and would be watching it carefully in the run-up to the Fed's next
meeting, in September.

[to top of second column] |

A security guard walks in front of an image of the Federal Reserve
following the two-day Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) policy
meeting in Washington, DC, U.S. on March 16, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/Files

MUTED AFFAIR
The gathering was already going to be a muted affair. The guest list had been
scaled back, with foreign central bankers not attending, many of the lodge
facilities closed or limited, and masks mandatory outside of meals.
Vaccines were required for all attendees and their families.
Even as late as Friday afternoon Fed policymakers had still been planning to
attend, with their staffs pinning down details for meetings outside of the
scheduled events.
The Fed said this week, however, that Powell would give his marquee speech
remotely. And now everyone else will attend online as well.
Sparsely populated Wyoming on a per capita basis has averaged 54 cases per
100,000 people in the last week versus 43 per 100,000 for the country as a
whole. Teton County's rate is 62 per 100,000.
While Fed officials remain convinced this wave will not derail the recovery, the
pace of the virus' current surge is starting to be felt.
Economists this week began trimming forecasts of economic growth, and while the
cuts weren't dramatic in what is still a strong recovery, they marked a turn
from the exuberance of the first half of the year.

"The impact of the Delta variant on growth and inflation is proving to be
somewhat larger than we expected," Goldman Sachs economists wrote on Thursday,
lowering projected 2021 growth to 6% from 6.4%.
High frequency data showed the start of a possible slow down in air travel and
dining in restaurants.
Bank of America economists noted a recent decline in credit card spending on
leisure – one of the business sectors hardest hit by the pandemic and struggling
to re-employ its workforce.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir, Howard Schneider; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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