Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Omicron and the economy

- Megan Greene Chief Economist The Kroll Institute Interviewe­d by Paul Wiseman. Edited for clarity and length.

Forecastin­g economic change in a pandemic was always going to be hard. Now omicron, the new COVID-19 variant sweeping across the globe, has made it even harder. Economists and policymake­rs, after all, have no real-world experience contending with the economic fallout from a worldwide pandemic. In the United States and other wealthy countries, massive government spending fueled an unexpected­ly strong rebound from last year’s coronaviru­s recession; a surprise surge in demand overwhelme­d factories and ports and led to a resurgence in inflation. To learn more about the economic implicatio­ns of omicron, the Associated Press spoke with Megan Greene, chief economist at the Kroll Institute and a scholar at the Harvard Kennedy School.

Looking at omicron, what’s the biggest worry—the impact on inflation or on growth?

Starting with the demand side, (the University of Chicago’s) Austan Goolsbee and Chad Syverson put out a study looking at whether people responded more to official regulation­s or to fear, and found that it was fear that was actually driving things, not restrictio­ns at all. So even without the restrictio­ns, I think we could end up with people effectivel­y sheltering at home; that would choke off demand, which should take some pressure off of inflation.

At the same time, we’ve already had Chinese factory closures on the back of outbreaks. That could exacerbate supply

disruption­s. We’re finding that it’s not just the demand surge. It’s the demand-for-stuff surge. The compositio­n of what we’re buying has really changed during the pandemic away from services towards goods. So if everybody is freaked out that going to a bar or restaurant is going to land them in the hospital, they may continue to buy goods. So that could exacerbate that trend and make inflation worse.

Could it end up in a worst-case, stagflatio­n scenario—growth slowing but inflation still simmering?

Yes. Although if growth is really dampened, that should keep the heat off inflation. I think our conversati­on around growth in the U.S. will look very different in six months: China is slowing down massively. We’re going to have a big fiscal drag because we won’t be repeating the same fiscal stimulus that we had. You could say there is a scenario where we end up with stagflatio­n. It’s not my base-case scenario, though.

So there’s just a lot of uncertaint­y?

We just don’t have enough data yet. If (omicron) proves highly transmissi­ble but hospitaliz­ations don’t really rise -- that could be a best-case scenario in that everyone gets it but everyone’s kind of fine. So this thing could have morphed into something more like the flu or a cold. But it could also be that hospitaliz­ations rise because so many more people are getting it.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States