U.S. economy's hot vax summer ends in cool COVID fall as Delta rises
Send a link to a friend
[September 03, 2021] By
Howard Schneider and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The promise of a
"normal" U.S. economy this summer, which kicked off with the June
revival of restaurants, air travel and baseball games, is transforming
into an uncertain fall of rising health and economic risks.
Labor Day weekend, the traditional end of the U.S. summer season, was
pegged as the moment when the economy would finally transition out of
the pandemic slump, with private sector jobs and wages replacing
unemployment benefits.
Instead, the summer is closing with rising COVID-19 case counts https://tmsnrt.rs/3taRlxN,
hospitals bulging with patients and dark predictions. The University of
Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation projects that
between now and Dec. 1 there will be 100,000 COVID deaths, more than in
the same period last year, when a wave of winter infections took hold
and vaccines were not yet available.
"I don't think fall 2021 is going to give us the catharsis we were
waiting for," said Nick Bunker, economic research director for hiring
site Indeed, or provide a clear view of how fast U.S. job markets can
recover the 5.7 million jobs missing from before the pandemic. "The
transition is going to be longer than expected. The issue is, is it a
stumble or does the baton get dropped?"
Special $300-per-week unemployment benefits end on Saturday. While
employers hope that will usher new job applicants into a labor-starved
market, there are signs the pandemic may have begun to curb their hiring
plans instead.
The reopening of schools, far from smoothing the way for parents to
return to full-time jobs, has been marked by erratic outbreaks,
quarantines and closures, as school boards battle over masking students.
The manager at The Irish Whisper, a pub near the Gaylord National Resort
and Convention Center in Oxon Hill, Maryland, said that business has
fallen off since an initial summertime rush.
"It's not as great as pre-COVID, but it's better than not having
anything," said the manager, who only gave his first name Andrew. "I
thought we were in the clear and then this variant emerged."
After a strong start early this summer, attendance is dropping https://tmsnrt.rs/2WMJs5W
in baseball stadiums.
BIDEN'S VIRUS OVERSHADOWED
It is a particularly sensitive moment for the Biden administration.
The Democratic president has taken a hit in the polls from the resurgent
virus, faces criticism over the Afghanistan withdrawal and must deal
with the aftermath of Hurricane Ida and a gauntlet of deadlines in
Congress in coming weeks to keep the government funded and his economic
agenda on track.
Biden's strategy of wiping out COVID by getting all of the United States
vaccinated was hindered by
https://www.reuters.com/
world/us/bidens-covid-19-strategy-thwarted-by-anti-vaxxers-delta-variant-2021-07-29
a politically charged anti-vaccination movement this summer, and the
pace of vaccinations has slowed since peaking in April.
A run of higher-than-expected inflation due to supply chain woes and
labor shortages consumed what would otherwise have been healthy wage
gains. A closely watched index of consumer confidence, which can
influence spending, tumbled in August to a six-month low.
[to top of second column] |
Shipping containers sit
on the dock at a container terminal at the Port of Long Beach-Port
of Los Angeles complex, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
pandemic, in Los Angeles, California, U.S., April 7, 2021.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
Progress on the virus "is (Biden's) No. 1 advantage, but people are discouraged
and frustrated and it's also interacting with the economy," said one Biden
adviser not authorized to speak on the record.
Administration officials believe the recovery largely remains on track, and
infrastructure and spending plans may partly make up for the lapsed weekly
unemployment insurance payments.
Democrats are hoping to finalize a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill as
soon as this month while also working on a $3.5 trillion bill that could only
secure party-line support.
Republicans are fighting the administration's most ambitious spending plans.
Goldman Sachs economists now estimate the "fiscal cliff," as spending rotates
away from the record government transfers of the past 18 months, will be a
noticeable drag on growth by late 2022.
Oxford Economics economists expect to trim their outlook for 2021 gross domestic
product growth to 5.5%, down from 7% in early August.
The reduction reflects "the deteriorating health situation weighing on optimism
and spending, lingering capital and labor supply constraints and a slower
inventory rebuild," Oxford chief U.S. economist Gregory Daco said in an email.
HIRING WEAKNESS?
Data on August jobs due to be released Friday will show whether the current
surge of infections, which drove the number of new cases from around 11,000 a
day in mid-June to almost 150,000 daily this week, is slowing hiring or the
recovery more broadly.
Economists are not expecting the sort of collapse in demand for restaurants,
travel and other services seen in earlier virus waves. Many Federal Reserve
officials feel businesses and families have learned to navigate the situation,
either finding ways to lower the risk of infection as they resume work and
business, or worrying less about infection because they're vaccinated.
U.S. firms added nearly a million jobs a month in June and July, and consensus
forecasts for August project a still-robust 750,000 gain.
Some employers argue that that figure could me much higher, given the record
number of openings, if they had not had to compete with unemployment benefits.
That hasn't been borne out in states that ended the federal benefits early over
the summer, where there's little evidence more people went back to work.
Now, employers may be pulling back on hiring themselves.
Hiring at around 50,000 small businesses has fallen since midsummer, data from
time manager Homebase shows, while a workforce recovery index from time
management firm UKG, which analyzes time card punches, fell 2.4% from July to
August.
It was sharpest in the southeast, where the spread of the virus was most
intense.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons
and Andrea Ricci)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |