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		Fed policy makers, like lawmakers, split on need for more fiscal aid
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		 [February 02, 2021]  By 
		Ann Saphir 
 (Reuters) - As the White House and 
		Congressional Democrats press for a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief 
		package that many Republicans say is more than what the country needs or 
		can afford, Federal Reserve policymakers are also split on the issue.
 
 "We are still in the teeth of this pandemic - and we are not out of the 
		woods yet," Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan told the Chicago Council 
		on Global Affairs in an online event Monday.
 
 He forecast, as vaccines get rolled out and more businesses can reopen, 
		the U.S. economy will likely grow about 5% this year, enough to push 
		unemployment down to 4.5%, from 6.7% in December.
 
 That forecast, he said, assumes no further fiscal relief, except what 
		may be needed to ensure there's enough money to vaccinate people and 
		reopen schools, and for the unemployed to make ends meet - an amount he 
		didn't quantify.
 
		
		 
		
 Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari, among the 
		central bank's most dovish policymakers, had a more expansive view of 
		fiscal relief, likening it to "wartime spending" and noting that the 
		government has plenty of capacity for issuing debt to pay for it.
 
 Kashkari also suggested he supports stimulus checks, a key part of 
		President Joe Biden's proposal opposed by Republican critics who contend 
		that many who get the checks may not actually need them. Biden's $1400 
		payments would come on top of the $600 checks in the package Congress 
		passed in December, and the $1200 checks included in the first round of 
		pandemic relief.
 
 "It's very hard to design a government program for the whole U.S. 
		economy that is effectively targeted that doesn't leave lots of people 
		out," Kashkari told an online seminar held by Montana’s Bureau of 
		Business and Economic Research. "The checks are like spraying water 
		against the fire: sometimes you just need water."
 
 RECESSION FAR FROM OVER
 
 The United States has been devastated by COVID-19, with more than 26 
		million Americans infected so far, and more than 441,000 dying in total.
 
		
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			Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari poses 
			during an interview with Reuters in his office at the bank's 
			headquarters in Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S., January 10, 2020. 
			REUTERS/ Ann Saphir 
            
			 
		Despite strength in the housing sector and some other segments of the 
		economy, the recession is far from over. Some 18 million Americans are 
		drawing on some form of unemployment insurance, many in hard-hit service 
		industries like restaurants, travel and hotels. 
		Congress and the White House, not the Fed, will decide how much stimulus 
		will be rolled out, but what is actually necessary remains a matter of 
		heated debate.
 West Virginia Governor Jim Justice, a Republican, said he supports more 
		fiscal relief. "If we actually throw away some money right now, so 
		what," he told CNN Monday.
 
 West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat, has said relief should be 
		targeted to those who need it.
 
 Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic summed up the general confusion 
		Monday.
 
		"It is hard for me to say exactly what the right number is. There is so 
		much uncertainty going on right now," Bostic told CNBC. "What I am 
		looking at right now...is what is happening over the next six months, 12 
		months, and trying to get a sense of where businesses are, get a sense 
		of how families are weathering the storm...and what we'll look like in 
		the summer time when I am hopeful that so much of the vaccine will be 
		through the population." 
		
		 
		The White House continued Monday to press for the $1.9 trillion package.
 “The risk is not that it is too big, this package, the risk is that it 
		is too small," Jen Psaki, White House Press Secretary, said on Monday 
		ahead of Biden's meeting with 10 Republican Senators proposing a $618 
		billion relief package. "That remains his view and it’s one he’ll 
		certainly express today.”
 
 (Reporting by Ann Saphir with additional reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; 
		Editing by Heather Timmons & Shri Navaratnam)
 
				 
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