Fed's Powell bets economy will navigate new coronavirus surge
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[July 30, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's
belief that the U.S. economy has "learned to handle" the coronavirus and
won't be swamped in a fresh wave of infections or by rising inflation
may get tested in coming weeks as schools reopen, supply chains remain
clogged, and federal unemployment benefits wane.
Data released on Thursday showed the risk ahead as the country navigates
the transition from an economy dependent for the last year on federal
government benefits to one where those emergency programs expire and
private incomes take over.
The economy returned to its pre-pandemic level of output in the second
quarter, according to gross domestic product data released by the
Commerce Department on Thursday, a rebound that came earlier than many
expected. But the report also showed personal income dropping alongside
a decline in federal transfer payments and the economy growing at an
annual rate of 6.5%, slightly below the 7% expected by the U.S. central
bank.
It was massive federal stimulus, unemployment benefits and other
payments that led to the "better-than-anyone-expected" outcomes during a
coronavirus surge last summer, which Powell cited on Wednesday as
evidence that each COVID-19 wave has had successively less economic
impact.
Those government payments are disappearing just as concerns rise around
the spread of the more infectious Delta variant of the virus, putting a
new note of caution around the U.S. growth outlook.
Graphic: Personal income has risen on government spending:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/REOPENING/
xlbvgqongvq/chart.png
Despite second-quarter GDP being slightly lower than expected and the
Delta variant "a key downside risk," Lydia Boussour, lead U.S. economist
for Oxford Economics, said she continued to anticipate 7% growth for the
full year as supply-chain problems ease, goods get onto shelves, and
consumers continue spending.
"We still expect the economy to maintain strong momentum," she wrote in
a note.
By contrast, Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capitol
Economics, painted a dour economic picture in which the Delta variant
becomes a drag and rising prices cut into household purchasing power.
Inflation measures in Thursday's GDP report, at greater than 6%, are the
highest since the early 1980s when the Fed was battling entrenched price
increases.
Ashworth said economic growth may slow to just 3.5% in the second half
of the year, "with the impact from the fiscal stimulus waning, surging
prices weakening purchasing power, the Delta variant running amok in the
South."
Graphic: Jobs lagging GDP:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBGROWTH/
xegpbzzrbpq/chart.png
'DEFIANTLY UPBEAT'
Powell issued his blunt assessment of COVID-19's threat to the economy
during a news conference on Wednesday to discuss the Fed's latest policy
meeting. In their statement, policymakers said the economic recovery
appeared on track, that the impact of the virus on the economy continued
to wane, and that the economy was making progress toward the day when
the Fed could reduce some of the emergency steps taken in 2020 to nurse
the economy through the pandemic.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell adjusts his tie as he arrives to
testify before a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee
hearing on “The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress”
on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., July 15, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
Coupled with earlier changes, the Fed's actions this week continued the
central bank's steady divorce between the ongoing pandemic and the
outlook for the economy.
Epidemiologists have warned from early on that the coronavirus would not
disappear - with true herd immunity a stretch goal in a country with
high levels of vaccine hesitancy - but rather be a part of the social
and economic background for years to come.
The Fed, in successive steps, has seemed to adopt to that view. Since
April it has stopped referring to the pandemic as a factor weighing on
the economy, emphasized the impact of vaccinations, and this week said,
in effect, that the virus would remain as a future risk, but not a
significant one.
"We’ve kind of learned to live with it," Powell told reporters. Even
with the Delta variant filling hospitals in some parts of the country,
"with a reasonably high percentage of the country vaccinated and the
vaccine apparently being effective ... the effects will probably be
less. There probably won’t be significant lockdowns and things like
that."
Whether that remains the case will be seen through the late summer and
fall. Some companies already have delayed the planned return of their
workforces to offices, potentially pushing out the day when downtown
retail stores and restaurants see their weekday traffic return.
Graphic: Jobs and COVID-19: https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/COVID/movanmymdpa/chart.png
Powell acknowledged that, at the margins and for a while at least, the
Delta surge could lead to further complications if school districts
delay the reopening of in-person learning, or if sidelined workers wait
a few more weeks to return to their jobs.
But for now, and absent a clear darkening of the economic outlook, it
won't derail Fed planning that anticipates continued job growth, and
needs to manage the risks of potentially higher inflation as well.
Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton, called Powell's
commentary this week "defiantly upbeat," and listed the hurdles his
outlook faces - from the Delta variant to the slow, ongoing efforts of
millions of unemployed workers to match themselves with new jobs.
The new infection surge "has already delayed the return to offices for
some companies to later this year," Swonk wrote. "We are becoming
accustomed to spending during outbreaks, as Powell noted ... That
spending has been supported by fiscal stimulus. That will wane as we
enter 2022."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Lindsay
Dunsmuir; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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