From lapsing job benefits to full stadiums, June could be U.S.
recovery's pivot
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[June 07, 2021] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fourteen months
after the pandemic triggered a national emergency, the final chapter of
the U.S. economic recovery may begin this month, with rapid changes
starting with the end of enhanced unemployment benefits in half the
states and ending in the fall's expected reopening of schools and
universities.
Along the way, Major League Baseball stadiums are slated to return to
full capacity, and the largest state economy, California, on June 15
will shed its final COVID-era restrictions and give bars, restaurants
and other businesses a green light on the road to normal.
That same day in Washington, the U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to
open debate about when and how to cut the economy loose from its
crisis-fighting monetary policy and shift to managing what is hoped to
be a long economic expansion.
The questions about just what the post-pandemic economy will look like
are myriad: How many people will return to jobs? How many businesses
will have survived or failed? How resilient will the country be when
pandemic supports are withdrawn? The answers should start to come soon.
"The timing really is awesome," Porchlight Brewing Co. general manager
Tyson Herzog said of the just-in-time-for-summer end of California's
restrictions, which closed many restaurants for parts of last year and
kept them under strict limits during the fight against the virus.
An $800 billion small business assistance program helped many firms
survive, including Herzog's. After a year of home-delivering beer in his
1999 Dodge Caravan he plans to hire more onsite staff and expand
production amid already record sales.
Since coronavirus vaccines rolled out in December, forecasts have
pointed to record-breaking numbers this year, including the fastest
annual gross domestic product growth in nearly 40 years.
More than 60% of people 12 years and older are at least partially
vaccinated. The rate of new infections and deaths has plummeted, while
confidence, travel, and human socializing - and the commerce that
accompanies all that - have risen steadily.
(GraphicS; Air travel picks up as infections drop -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/PIVOT/
dgkvlndyyvb/chart.png)
Still, the pieces have not yet clicked in unison.
Companies in May added 559,000 jobs, but the total number remains 7.6
million short of early 2020. About 3.6 million more people are
unemployed, and the labor force is 3.5 million smaller.
Shortages of supplies, workers and raw materials have crimped the
recovery with businesses curtailing hours, turning away customers, or
delaying filling orders. The Fed's most recent national economic
snapshot referenced shortages 44 times, compared with 17 in January and
three a year ago.
Economists expect that to ease. The pandemic put the economy into what
some likened to an induced coma. Shaking off the stupor takes time, and
is complicated by some of the programs used to cushion the economy's
sharp drop last spring.
Stimulus payments and low interest rates, for example, fueled a boom in
home sales that spilled into home construction and lumber prices. Yet
the costs for wood and some other commodities already have begun easing:
lumber futures are down 24% from their peak, with copper and aluminum
falling around 5%. Likewise, the splurge on automobiles, appliances and
other goods will likely prove a one-time affair; even if demand remains
strong, supply will likely catch up.
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Customers drink, eat and talk at well-spaced tables on Almanac
Taproom’s former-parking lot-turned-pandemic-beer-garden in Alameda,
California, U.S. June 4, 2021. REUTERS/Ann Saphir
Workers sidelined by a variety of issues, from health concerns to lack of
childcare, have been given latitude on when to return to work through expanded
unemployment benefits that pay some more than their former jobs. That starts to
wind down on June 12 when the first four states end the extra benefits launched
last spring as one plank in a financial "bridge" to the other side of the
pandemic.
(Graphic: A red state rolloff -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/EMPLOYMENT/
gjnvwmwzlvw/chart.png)
In all, $5.2 trillion deployed across an array of programs helped make the
coronavirus recession unique: Personal incomes actually rose even as
unemployment hit 14.8% in April 2020.
With the money now largely spent, the programs one-by-one are being shuttered.
By July 10 half the states will have ended the extra unemployment benefits, and
the program lapses nationwide on Sept. 4. The Payroll Protection Program of
small business loans closed May 31.
There's dispute over what role those and other programs play in decisions to
work or not. But to the degree prices, wages and other factors have been
distorted by the pandemic, the next few weeks should wring those distortions
out.
(Graphics: Oxford Economics Recovery Index -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
USA-ECONOMY/OXFORDINDEX/
yzdvxqzmkpx/chart.png)
June will inaugurate a "summer-boom with demand still strong and supply issues -
on labor and capital - being resolved," said Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist
for Oxford Economics. "There is evidence of supply bottlenecks slowly
easing...On the labor front, reduced virus fear, reduced benefits, better
childcare, will draw people back."
And people seem primed to respond.
After a year of lockdown, public parks are again hosting crowds, sports stadiums
are filling, and restaurants are booked to the limit.
California had among the first cases of COVID-19, imposed some of the stiffest
restrictions, and will be among the last states to let it all go.
Damian Fagan, owner of the Almanac Taproom in Alameda, is getting ready. While
he is adding up to six new employees to his current 12-person staff ahead of the
June 15 reopening, he expects such a rush of business he plans to limit his
hours for another few weeks "so we don't have this tsunami of changes."
"I don't know how long this party will last," he said. Eventually, "this massive
excitement period dies down," and business can get back to normal.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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