Lodi News-Sentinel

Powell urges push to deliver full employment

- Craig Torres

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the U.S. job market remains a long way from a full recovery and called on both lawmakers and the private sector to support workers.

“We are still very far from a strong labor market whose benefits are broadly shared,” Powell said Wednesday in a speech to the Economic Club of New York, noting that employment last month was nearly 10 million below February 2020 levels. “Achieving and sustaining maximum employment will require more than supportive monetary policy.”

Powell’s remarks come as President Joe Biden pushes for $1.9 trillion in additional pandemic aid that Republican­s oppose and even some Democrats — including former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers — worry is too large.

Repeating that monetary policy would remain very supportive of the economy, the Fed chair cited a need for continued fiscal policy support.

Returning to maximum employment “will require a society-wide commitment, with contributi­ons from across government and the private sector,” Powell said. “The potential benefits of investing in our nation’s workforce are immense.”

As the risk of the yearlong pandemic recedes with vaccinatio­ns rolling out, it’s unclear if employers will make do with smaller workforces, or if job growth will pick up.

Service-sector jobs have been particular­ly hard hit. And while unemployme­nt was 6.3% in January compared to a 14.8% peak, the statistic doesn’t capture the full extent of labor market slack. Powell said a broader measure of unemployme­nt would put the rate at about 10%.

The share of working-age Americans who are participat­ing in the labor force has plunged 2 percentage points from a year ago to 61.4%. The pandemic has also exacerbate­d inequality, hitting younger workers, women, low-income earners and minorities harder.

The unemployme­nt rate for Blacks was 9.2% in January versus 5.7% for Whites. Powell cited several of these benchmarks in his text, giving a sense of the diverse array of data on his dashboard that he is watching for progress toward the Fed’s maximum employment goals.

He also leaned against the idea that the economy might overheat with additional stimulus. He said it could take “many years” to overcome scars from longterm unemployme­nt, and even with the jobless rate at 3.5% in February, signs of inflation were scarce.

“There was every reason to expect that the labor market could have strengthen­ed even further without causing a worrisome increase in inflation were it not for the onset of the pandemic,” he said.

The Fed failed to sustainabl­y achieve its 2% target since it was adopted in 2012. Frustrated by the lack of progress, Fed officials in 2020 moved to a strategy where they would attempt to overshoot the goal to make up for shortfalls and average 2% over time.

Many economists say it will take years to achieve average inflation of 2%, meaning monetary policy will remain easy for a long time.

The Fed has signaled it expects to hold interest rates near zero at least through 2023 and Powell repeated the central bank’s commitment not to adjust its $120 billion monthly pace of bond purchases until it had seen “substantia­l further progress’ on employment and inflation.

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