San Francisco Fed's Daly: Too soon to say job market 'stalling'
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[October 11, 2021] (Reuters)
-The U.S. job market will continue to feel
the effects of COVID-19, but it is too soon to say it is "stalling," San
Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said on Sunday.
"It's going to have these ups and downs, especially with the Delta
variant," Daly said on the CBS weekend news program "Face the Nation"
when asked about a second straight month of disappointing job growth in
September.
"So I think it's too soon to say it's stalling, but certainly we're
seeing the pain of COVID and the pain of the Delta variant impact the
labor market," she said.
Daly's comments came after the Labor Department on Friday reported that
just 194,000 new jobs were created last month, fewer than half the
number expected by economists in a Reuters poll. While the unemployment
rate dropped to an 18-month low of 4.8%, it was partly a factor of
people leaving the U.S. workforce.
Coupled with an equally disappointing employment report card for August,
the recent data has raised concerns that the U.S. economy will take
longer than expected to recoup the remaining 5 million jobs lost to the
coronovirus pandemic, and that factors like high inflation, souring
consumer sentiment and the persistence of COVID-19 will sap growth.
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Daly said she had always thought the Delta variant of the coronavirus
would create headwinds for the economy, but she does not expect it to
trigger a recession.
"I always expected Delta to take a toll, just not put us into another
recession, and we're seeing that toll," she said. "We're seeing this
disrupt families, disrupt schooling, disrupt people's ability to get to
work and feel safe about it."
"Delta has taken a toll, but it hasn't yet derailed us," Daly said. "As
goes COVID, so goes the economy."
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San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Mary Daly poses at the
bank’s headquarters in San Francisco, California, U.S., July 16,
2019. REUTERS/Ann Saphir/File Photo/File Photo
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Asked about inflation, Daly said the price pressures U.S. consumers are facing
are "painful" but are directly related to COVID-19 and are not expected to
persist. That echoes her previous and many other Fed officials' assessments that
the current bout of high inflation is "transitory" even if it has extended
further than most policymakers had initially expected.
"Everyone's feeling the rising prices for energy, food, basic services, and
that's painful because we aren't used to seeing it," Daly said. "It's
eye-popping in some categories."
"We have these really anxious-to-get-out-there-and-spend consumers hitting the
wall of supply constraints, and of course the prices are going to rise," Daly
said. "But I don't see this as a long-term phenomenon."
Daly and other Fed officials are engaged in discussion over when and how to
start removing the extraordinary support they have provided for the economy
during the pandemic. Even with Friday's soft payrolls report, Fed officials are
still expected to press ahead with the first stage of that withdrawal as early
as their next meeting in early November.
(Reporting by Dan Burns, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and Chizu Nomiyama
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