Oroville Mercury-Register

GOVERNMENT Powell and Mnuchin voice economic optimism but back more federal aid

- ByMartin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON » Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin expressed cautious optimism Tuesday that the U.S. economy is rebounding fromthe pandemic-induced recession with federal support but that more help from the government is likely needed.

Powell told the House Financial Services Committee that he believed the economy was “healing.” Mnuchin, the chief economic spokesman for the Trump administra­tion, proclaimed that the country was in the “midst of the fastest economic recovery from any crisis in history” after the steepest economic plunge since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Striking a more cautious note, Powell noted that the job market has regained only about half the 22 million jobs that were lost in March and April when the virus flattened the U. S. economy, triggering a recession. Both officials stressed that major sectors of the economy were still suffering.

Some Republican lawmakers complained that House Democrats were blocking approval of further relief because of their insistence on achieving a larger package than GOP lawmakers are willing to support.

Mnuchin said he was ready to resume negotiatio­ns and said the administra­tion would be willing to support stand-alone legislatio­n to boost support through the Paycheck Protection Program, which benefited small businesses.

“We are in a very different situation than we were the last time,” when Congress enacted nearly $3 trillion in emergency financial aid, Mnuchin said. “At that time, the entire economy was shut down.”

Mnuchin said that further federal aid should be focused on the most damaged sectors of the economy, such as restaurant­s and the travel industry.

Tuesday’s testimony from Powell and Mnuchin began three days of oversight hearings on the government programs thatwere enacted last spring to cushion the impact of a devastatin­g recession in which much of the economy was shut down to try to limit the spread of the coronaviru­s.

That support totaled a record high of nearly $3 trillionan­d included suchmeasur­es as economic impact payments of up to $1,200 per individual, enhanced unemployme­nt benefits of $600 per week and a Paycheck Protection Program to encourage small businesses to keep workers on their payrolls.

The Democratic- led House passed additional support. But Senate Republican­s have balked at the size of the measure, and both sides have spentmonth­s arguing over possible compromise legislatio­n. After some programs expired this summer, President Donald Trump signed executive orders to keep aid flowing, although that effort has produced limited benefit.

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