Lodi News-Sentinel

Economy’s recovery stalling as coronaviru­s cases surge

- By Maeve Sheehey and Steve Matthews

The official numbers have begun to confirm what many Americans feel in their bones: the economy is buckling once again.

The worsening pandemic is restrainin­g or even snuffing out the economy’s nascent recovery. From restaurant dining to air travel and now to filings for unemployme­nt benefits, a growing body of evidence indicates America’s rebound from the pandemic is stalling days before hundreds of billion s of dollars’ worth of federal aid is set to expire.

Lawmakers may eventually iron out an agreement on a new stimulus package, but for now they remain far apart on many of the key details.

“If lawmakers don’t quickly pass another sizable rescue package that includes help to state and local government­s and more income support to the unemployed, then the economy will suffer another downturn — a socalled double-dip,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “Unemployme­nt will remain in the double digits until well after the pandemic is over.”

The jobless claims report was so grim — with the ranks of those filing for benefits swelling to 1.42 million — that it even got the attention of stock investors. They pushed the S&P 500 Index down 1.2% on Thursday, marking the biggest decline in almost a month. Stocks were down again on Friday.

Democrats have proposed a $3.5 trillion package of virus relief that has already passed the House. Senate Republican­s are working on a roughly $1 trillion plan, but disagreeme­nts within the GOP have bogged down a detailed proposal. That’s not expected until Monday, and negotiatin­g a compromise with Democrats may run through the first week in August.

While the report also showed a decline in continuing claims that suggests hiring has picked up, the rise in layoffs from an already-elevated level is a sign the labor market is going in the wrong direction.

“This is definitely something that we’re studying very closely, looking into the underlying numbers to see if this is an anomaly or something more concerning,” Tyler Goodpseed, acting chairman of President Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers, said Thursday on Bloomberg Television.

The unemployme­nt figures followed mounting evidence of a stall in the recovery as coronaviru­s cases surged across much of the country over the past month. Key points from government and private reports include:

• Credit-card spending by JPMorgan Chase & Co. customers “is little changed since late June,” remaining about 12% below year-earlier levels, the firm’s economists said in a note Wednesday. That follows a “rapid economic rebound” in May and early June.

• The rebound in air passengers has leveled off at less than a third of typical levels. Southwest Airlines Co. vowed Thursday to adjust its flight schedule “aggressive­ly” in response to volatile demand.

• A widely watched measure of consumer sentiment turned decidedly more pessimisti­c in July. Consumer spending accounts for about 70% of the economy.

•Restaurant bookings have stopped rising nationwide amid virus fears, remaining at onethird of year-earlier levels, according to OpenTable data.

• U.S. employment dropped by 4.1 million from the first week to the second week of July, according to a Census Bureau survey.

“We are seeing — in the areas where Covid has come back in a significan­t way like California, Texas, Arizona — mobility data weaken, small business data shows some softening as well as consumer spending,” Bank of America Corp. chief U.S. economist Michelle Meyer said.

If there’s a bright side, “there hasn’t been a collapse by any means” — more of a “modest softening,” Meyer said. And if the reimposed social-distancing measures can help control the virus, “one would imagine that the mobility will pick up again and people will reengage to some extent,” she said.

“Customers and businesses have adapted to a new environmen­t. Some have reopened in U.S., some have also been reclosed or limited again. We expect start-stop to be the base case as we look ahead.” — Bank of America’s Brian Moynihan on July 17 earnings call.

Not everything is going in the wrong direction. Several gauges have shown expansion in regional manufactur­ing this month. Demand for home purchases has remained relatively strong, as measured by mortgage applicatio­ns.

“The re-shutting of the economy is largely a retail phenomenon,” said Michael Englund of Action Economics LLC. “Production is continuing to accelerate.”

In addition, the decline in continuing jobless claims over the past few weeks indicated that July’s jobs report — due Aug. 7 — could very well show an increase in employment, though it’s far from guaranteed that gains would continue in August and beyond.

“The rate of separation remains extremely high, extraordin­arily high,” said Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Plc. “One report doesn’t make a trend, but that’s what we obviously would be concerned about.”

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? A store stands closed near Wall Street as the coronaviru­s keeps financial markets and businesses mostly closed on May 8, 2020, in New York City
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE A store stands closed near Wall Street as the coronaviru­s keeps financial markets and businesses mostly closed on May 8, 2020, in New York City

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