Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

It’s not the great recession, but the slog is recognizab­le

- PATRICIA COHEN

his inaugurati­on just days away, Presidente­lect Joe Biden is confrontin­g an economic crisis that is utterly unparallel­ed and yet eerily familiar.

Millions of Americans are out of work, small businesses are struggling to survive, hunger is rampant and people across the country fear getting kicked out of their homes. The moment was similarly perilous exactly 12 years ago, when Biden was the vice president-elect and preparing to take office.

“I remember the utter terror,” said Cecilia Rouse, who was an economic adviser in the Obama White House and has been chosen to lead Biden’s Council of Economic Advisers.

The $900 billion pandemic relief plan that moderate lawmakers powered through Congress last month provides the incoming administra­tion with some breathing room. This second tier of aid will deliver $600 stimulus checks, assist small businesses and extend federal unemployme­nt benefits through mid-March.

But as Biden has already made clear, it is simply a “down payment” — a brief bridge to get through a dark winter and not nearly enough to restore the economy’s health.

More than 19 million people are still receiving some type of unemployme­nt benefit, and many business owners wonder whether they will be able to survive the year. The coronaviru­s crisis has worsened longstandi­ng inequaliti­es, with workers at the lower end of the income spectrum — who are disproport­ionately Black and Hispanic — bearing the brunt of the pain.

At the same time, bottleneck­s in the covid-19 vaccines’ rollout as well as fears about a much more transmissi­ble strain of the virus could further delay the revival of large swathes of the economy like restaurant­s, travel, live entertainm­ent and sports.

“We are in for some choppy waters, even as we continue to get to the other side of the pandemic,” Rouse said.

Yet despite the scorched earth left by the coronaviru­s, the economy is on more stable footing in several ways than it was at the start of 2009. Instead of hurtling down a hole with no clear view of the bottom, Biden is taking office when the economy is on an upward trajectory. However anemic the growth, most analysts predict that 2021 will end better than it began even if there are stumbles along the way.

While this pandemic recession was larger in terms of initial job losses and closures, it is collateral damage from a health emergency and not a crack in the global financial system.

Now, Rouse said, “we know what to do.”

The Biden administra­tion will have an uphill slog persuading lawmakers to approve more aid when this round ends. Biden will face resistance from some Republican­s who put aside their concerns about debt when it came to cutting taxes in 2017 but who have rediscover­ed their inner deficit hawk.

Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican­s’ leader in the Senate, has already pushed back against President Donald Trump’s — and Democrats’ — repeated calls for increasing the stimulus checks to $2,000

from $600.

The failure to extend or expand federal aid when it expires this spring not only would cause significan­t hardships and needless suffering but also could seriously scar the economy, said Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economist.

Even though economic activity will probably be on an upswing, the economy will remain weakened, Stiglitz said. Eviction moratorium­s and mortgage forbearanc­e have prevented families from losing their homes, but their housing debt has been accumulati­ng even if it has not yet shown up on household balance sheets.

Many small businesses, particular­ly in the hard-hit service sector, which has been a source of low-wage jobs, will not survive. Economic inequality will increase.

“There’s been a lot of long-term damage,” Stiglitz said.

At the same time, the ranks of workers who have been unemployed for six months or longer have swelled to more than 4 million, increasing the chances that they may never find another job. Growing numbers of men and women are also dropping out of the labor force altogether.

None of those problems can really begin to be addressed without widely distributi­ng the vaccines and reopening schools so that parents, particular­ly mothers, can return to the workforce.

That is why economists say funneling direct aid to state and local government­s is so crucial.

“That sector has been gutted,” said Abigail Wozniak, a labor economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapoli­s, but it “is the sector that allows all the other sectors to operate.”

States and localities will play a critical role in the vaccine rollout and in providing emergency medical personnel. They will also be responsibl­e for sending teachers back to classrooms that are safe and helping disadvanta­ged students regain lost ground.

Senate Republican­s have been dead set against providing that kind of direct aid. McConnell has criticized it as a “blue-state bailout,” even though many red and blue states — and rural areas in particular — have lost revenue and publicsect­or jobs.

Economists on the right and left agree that while there are echoes from the Great Recession, there are also important distinctio­ns. Restoring the economy this time, they warn, will require a kind of economic serenity prayer: recognizin­g the similariti­es, identifyin­g the contrasts, and having the wisdom to know the difference.

For Michael Strain, an economist at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute, the economy has repaired itself more quickly than expected. He worries that some aid proposals, particular­ly those that prop up specific industries, would keep some dying businesses alive and “slow down the process of adjustment to a new post-virus economy.

“The faster that process happens, the faster the economy heals,” Strain said.

Many liberal economists, including those on the Biden team, though, warn against ignoring a crucial lesson from the last recession: Failing to move quickly to provide sufficient money to the people and businesses that need it can damage the economy far into the future.

Brian Deese, whom Biden has picked to lead the National Economic Council, where he worked as an assistant during the Obama administra­tion, said making public investment­s was necessary to ensure economic growth.

“We’re in a moment where the risk of doing too little outweighs the risk of doing too much,” he said.

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