Analysis-Post recovery? Fed, elected officials now challenged to define
new normal
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[November 15, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A year ago, as the
coronavirus built toward its most intense peak, the U.S. economy was in
a dark spot with job growth stalled, more than 10 million out of work
and about to lose unemployment benefits, and warnings of a slide back
into recession.
After the deployment of three vaccines and two rounds of government
spending since, some measures of the economy have now hit pre-pandemic
levels - and shifted the challenge for policymakers from battling a
health crisis to determining which remaining problems are still rooted
in the pandemic and which may need longer-term solutions.
Across issues as sensitive as racial employment gaps and as tangled as
the path of inflation, that question will figure centrally in Federal
Reserve and political debates over where economic and monetary policy
should turn next, and whether those policies ultimately mesh or clash
with each other.
The Fed's focus is on high inflation it hopes is mostly pandemic related
and likely to ease without the need for higher interest rates. President
Joe Biden's focus is on a just-passed $1 trillion infrastructure package
and a follow-on $1.75 trillion bill focused on education, healthcare and
climate change.
"We have been so focused on short-term recovery," said Nela Richardson,
chief economist at payroll processor ADP, but "it is not just about
going back to where we started, it is really taking stock of where we
are and the structural changes that have been produced by COVID."
That could range from a workforce made permanently smaller by
retirements, changes in work preference and declining immigration, to
inflation shifted persistently higher because globally, she said, "the
free flow of goods and services is not the same as it was."
IS THE RECOVERY COMPLETE?
On Nov. 9, 2020, when Pfizer Inc announced its COVID-19 vaccine was
effective, an Oxford Economics "recovery tracker" stood at 80.5, nearly
20 percentage points below the start of the pandemic. It would go lower
still, to 72, as the virus spread and firms unexpectedly shed jobs
again.
Late last month it passed 100, meaning that across a combination of
measures of production, employment, consumption and health, the economy
was on net back where it started before the coronavirus.
(GRAPHIC: Oxford Economics Recovery Index -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/OXFORDINDEX/
jznvnyedlpl/
chart.png)
That doesn't mean every metric had climbed to its starting point, just
that for every remaining weak spot - hotel occupancy for example -
something offsets it like a jump in restaurant visits or rising use of
public transit.
Similarly for the labor market, the remaining shortfalls are glaring.
Some 4.2 million fewer people are on U.S. payrolls than in February
2020.
But the impulse seems there for continued job gains, between record
numbers of job openings, rising wages, and people willing to quit jobs
presumably for better ones.
(GRAPHIC: Unemployed to job openings - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBS/egvbkmeoepq/chart.png)
Many economists and Fed officials feel it is just a matter of time,
perhaps another year, before the economy hits full employment. A Kansas
City Fed labor market index shows a job market running well above its
long-term average with still more upward momentum.
(GRAPHIC: Kansas City Fed labor index - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBS/mopanjoqmva/chart.png)
PANDEMIC FISSURES, OR SOMETHING MORE?
Outside the doors of the Kansas City Fed, that index would seem to match
the facts on the ground. As of September, Missouri and neighboring
Kansas had unemployment rates below 4% versus 4.6% nationally.
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Shoppers browse in a supermarket while wearing masks to help slow
the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in north St. Louis,
Missouri, U.S. April 4, 2020. REUTERS/Lawrence Bryant/File Photo
That's not true everywhere. In the industrial Midwest through the mid-Atlantic
and New England employment is as much as 9% below the pre-pandemic level. The
two largest state economies, California and New York, are both about 5% short.
(GRAPHIC: A still disjointed recovery -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/jnvwexybwvw/
chart.png)
The differences may stem from tradeoffs made earlier in the pandemic, with
stricter health rules in some states suppressing the virus but tempering the
recovery and looser restrictions in others allowing a faster jobs rebound at the
cost of subsequent disease outbreaks.
But it poses a puzzle.
Are the lagging states still impacted by the pandemic and just need time to
complete their bounceback? Or have their economies restructured around different
industries or technologies that need fewer workers?
Similar questions surround the stalled labor force participation rate, still 1.7
percentage points below its pre-pandemic level, a gap of around 3 million people
neither working nor looking for a job.
Research by Jefferies and others has estimated that, even at the lowest income
levels, households have perhaps two months extra cash on hand from stimulus and
other payments, including ongoing tax rebates for families with children, that
may let them be more selective about work.
If people have left the workforce permanently, however, full employment may
arrive sooner than anticipated. That has implications for the Fed, and for the
Biden administration if the workers needed to staff new infrastructure or other
programs become more difficult or costly to find.
Job growth across industries has been uneven, too. Businesses that move goods
now employ more people than before the pandemic, riding a surge in demand as the
coronavirus shuttered sports stadiums, concert halls and other places where
people ordinarily would have spent some of their money. Core service industries
like leisure and hospitality are still nearly 10% short.
(GRAPHIC: Jobs by industry -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INDUSTRY/qmypmdoolvr/
chart.png)
What's unknown is whether that evens out when spending shifts back to services,
as many economists expect, or whether the occupational mix has changed for good.
Likewise inflation may be running at a 30-year high because the recovery isn't
finished, and will fall as spending, work and other habits return to normal.
But if something larger is in play - if a change in how inflation works has been
mistaken for short-term supply chain or other pandemic disruptions - it could
pose major risks.
"The risk is that (Fed officials) panic and chase down inflation" with faster
and higher interest rate increases that could, Grant Thornton Chief Economist
Diane Swonk wrote recently, "end our relationship with inflation but at a hefty
price. It could tip the economy into a recession, or worse, if those hikes
reverberate across developing economies."
(GRAPHIC: Alternate inflation measures -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INFLATION/znpnekxmdvl/
chart.png)
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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