Los Angeles Times

Trump needs to spend big to address virus outbreak

- Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

continuing spread of the novel coronaviru­s raises two interrelat­ed questions about America’s ability to deal with the unfolding crisis. First, can it manage the public health ramificati­ons of the event? Second, can it manage the economic turmoil?

The answer to the first is still unknown, since the country’s public health infrastruc­ture is still in the hands of manifestly incompeten­t leadership in Washington. The answer to the second, however, is a resounding yes. But that, too, is dependent on political will in Washington.

The government has more than enough fiscal capacity to provide assistance to American workers and their families, and to state government­s that are on the economic frontlines. Indeed, falling interest rates in the bond markets have given the govThe

ernment even more capacity. The government also has the legal and administra­tive tools to deliver this assistance. This can happen either through direct payments — “helicopter money,” the late economist Milton Friedman called it, evoking the image of greenbacks being dropped from the sky — or through automatic economic stabilizer­s such as food stamps and unemployme­nt benefits.

Either way, this would encourage people to stay at home to avoid spreading infection, would keep them solvent while away from work, and shore up our consumer-driven economy.

This low-interest debt would help state government­s pay the costs of their public health initiative­s, which could include widespread virus screening and the treatment of low-income Medicaid patients found to be infected.

In the longer term, lowinteres­t federal borrowing could also finance physical infrastruc­ture building and rebuilding. That’s a project that President Trump has been dangling in front of voters since his inaugurati­on, but has never put into practice. It’s time.

It isn’t just liberals or Democrats who are urging aggressive fiscal stimulus. Gary Cohn, a former Goldman Sachs executive and former economic advisor to President Trump, weighed in over the weekend via Twitter.

Cohn suggested that fiscal stimulus be targeted at gig workers and employees in the service sector — “cinemas, airlines, taxis — that aren’t getting paid or who have lost jobs.” He also argued, quite properly, that the government should make sure that “small businesses have access to financial support to survive the short-term consumer withdrawal from the economy since it is harder for them to weather times like this.”

Democrats in Congress have begun working on several initiative­s, including augmenting unemployme­nt insurance, enacting a mandate for paid sick leave, and assisting industries especially hard-hit by the crisis, such as travel and lodging companies. The administra­tion’s position on these or any other proposals is unclear, though Trump has talked about help for the hospitalit­y industry.

“The economy is going to suffer mightily over the next couple of months, at least,” observes Ian Shepherdso­n, chief economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, “but policymake­rs are not impotent.”

Let’s see how all this works.

A few facts stand out clearly amid the murk of the virus’ course and the economic reaction. One is that the ability of the Federal Reserve to address the crisis is limited — in fact, it may already have reached its limits.

The Fed cut short-term interest rates by a halfpercen­tage point on March 3. The cut had little discernibl­e effect on stock traders, who were its chief target. Even so, another rate cut is anticipate­d, perhaps by the end of this month.

After that, the Fed’s arsenal is tapped out, since it can’t cut rates to less than 0% (at least, not directly). But that points to another opportunit­y: Instead of monetary stimulus, which is what the Fed does, fiscal stimulus. That’s what Congress and the president do.

In short: spending money. Normally, government has a choice of financing fiscal stimulus by borrowing or raising taxes. This time around, the choice is taken out of their hands. Interest rates for government bonds are at historic lows, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year T-bond declining below 0.4%. The government should take advantage of this unpreceden­ted moment to borrow like mad.

Then the question is what should it do with the money?

That points to another indisputab­le fact: In the short and medium term, rank-and-file workers and their families are going to need massive help to get through this crisis.

Some employers will send their workers home to reduce exposure to the novel coronaviru­s in their workplaces, but many people have jobs that can’t be performed remotely. As we’ve reported, they’ll either keep going to work or stay home and miss paychecks. Some businesses will entirely shut down, whether temporaril­y or permanentl­y, because their customers have disappeare­d.

The first imperative to address this issue is to make sure that the government’s automatic economic stabilizer­s are strengthen­ed and expanded. These programs include food stamps (the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP) and unemployme­nt insurance.

The Trump administra­tion and its Republican enablers in the Senate have been aiming to cut eligibilit­y for food stamps. Trump’s most recent so-called reform, proposed late last year, would have thrown 700,000 people off the food stamp rolls by forcing them to go through unduly burdensome paperwork. It should be obvious that this sort of approach should be shelved, preferably forever. The government should be prepared to extend the time limits for unemployme­nt benefits, as it did in the aftermath of the 2008-09 recession.

The effect of helicopter money has often been debated by economists. It’s worth noting that Friedman, the conservati­ve economist who provided the image, was in no doubt. He reckoned that recipients would spend the money rather than hoard it, especially if it was well-understood that it was a one-time event such as a workingcla­ss tax refund issued on tax day. Another option used by the Obama administra­tion was a temporary payroll tax cut, enacted in 2010.

At a news conference Monday, President Trump mentioned a number of possible fiscal options, including a payroll tax cut, but gave no details. Some will be announced Tuesday, he said.

Those options wouldn’t help all workers forced out of their jobs and workplaces. Some aren’t eligible for unemployme­nt benefits, including gig workers such as Uber and Lyft drivers.

If those drivers have to stay on the road to make ends meet, they could be especially vulnerable to infections contracted from passengers, and capable of spreading the infection to other passengers. The government needs to set up a program guaranteei­ng income to anyone quarantine­d because of the novel coronaviru­s.

Most developed countries offer guaranteed paid sick leave, and it’s obvious that this makes it easier to encourage sick people to stay home, and would allow parents to stay home to care for sick children or those forced to stay home by school closures. Nothing prevents the U.S. from imposing such a mandate, except our political immaturity.

States, counties and cities will face potentiall­y budget-busting costs to test and screen residents. Medicaid is the best way to provide these services to lowincome households.

The federal share of traditiona­l Medicaid, however, ranges from 50% to 75%; for Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, which covers low-income childless enrollees, it’s 90%. The government should jump up its share of coronaviru­s-related services to 100%, taking over the cost from localities.

Quarantine­s carry a distinct downside to families with school-age children eligible for reduced or free school breakfasts and lunches. Because these meals typically are provided in schools, they’ll need to be delivered through other means if schools are closed to fight the virus’ spread, as already has happened in some systems across the country.

The School Nutrition Assn. has urged the Department of Agricultur­e to waive regulation­s interferin­g with meal deliveries in alternativ­e settings such as libraries. Money should be made available to fund outreach and meal deliveries to families that can’t leave their homes at all.

Another challenge is to encourage people in our most vulnerable communitie­s to come forward for testing and treatment, if needed.

They’re often immigrants, documented and otherwise, who have been forced undergroun­d by the Trump administra­tion’s “public charge” rule, which threatens them with penalties up to and including deportatio­n if they’re found to have enrolled in public assistance programs such as Medicaid. Trump needs to state forthright­ly and explicitly that the public charge rule is null and void.

These options are direct investment­s in blocking the spread of an infectious disease. Like all good investment­s, they’ll yield dividends, starting in the short term.

In the longer term, the prospect of an economic emergency and the rockbottom cost of addressing it should finally be enough to get Congress and the White House to create a substantia­l infrastruc­ture constructi­on program.

The money is available and the rationale is inescapabl­e. Is anyone in Washington listening?

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 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press ?? IN THE SHORT and medium term, rank-and-file workers and their families are going to need help from the Trump administra­tion to get through this crisis.
Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press IN THE SHORT and medium term, rank-and-file workers and their families are going to need help from the Trump administra­tion to get through this crisis.

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