BusinessMirror

US economy ready to surge with big stimulus, fast vaccines

- By Olivia Rockeman & Reade Pickert

WITH Democrats passing an almost $2 trillion stimulus measure and Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns moving ahead, the US economic outlook is much sunnier than it looked in early January. The latest Bloomberg monthly survey of economists shows the annualized pace of growth in the first quarter will be 4.8 percent, twice as fast as respondent­s expected just two months ago. For the full year, gross domestic product is projected to rise 5.5 percent, which would be the fastest since 1984 and is up from January’s estimate of 4.1 percent. After January’s key run-off elections in Georgia, where Democrats secured two Senate seats to win slim control of the chamber from Republican­s, economists were generally penciling in a pandemic relief package worth around $1 trillion. Democrats stuck together to push through a bill almost double that size; no Republican senators voted for the plan on Saturday. The measure next goes back to the House for a final vote, expected on Tuesday. President Joe Biden, speaking Saturday after the Senate vote, looked for a major boost to the economy.

“This will create millions of new jobs,” Biden told reporters at the White House. “It’s estimated over 6 million new jobs by itself; increase the gross domestic product by a trillion dollars.”

“As tough as this moment is, there are brighter days ahead—there really are,” Biden said. “It’s never been a good bet to bet against America.”

An additional round of $1,400 stimulus checks for millions of Americans, combined with supplement­al jobless benefits and the accelerati­on in vaccinatio­ns, should help sustain growth throughout the year, said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont

Securities LLC. Government stimulus will “give a shot of adrenaline for a short period of time,” Stanley said. He noted that “it will kind of fade out, and the more fundamenta­l aspect of things, which is really just opening up and getting back to something closer to the pre-pandemic norm for activity, should kick in.”

The Bloomberg survey of 67 economists was conducted February 26 to March 3. While economic growth is primed for a strong 2021, it could also mean another partisan divide over the next item on Biden’s legislativ­e agenda: a multitrill­ion-dollar plan focusing on infrastruc­ture. Democrats hope the package could get bipartisan support, but Republican­s—and possibly some moderate Democrats—are likely to be concerned about how the proposal would be funded, certain add-on provisions, and the size of the overall plan, especially if the economy shows sustained progress in the coming months.

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