San Antonio Express-News

Fed officials urge newstimulu­s now

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Federal Reserve policymake­rs on Wednesday highlighte­d the importance of fiscal stimulus for an economic recovery that recently has outperform­ed forecasts.

Chairman Jerome Powell continued towave the fiscal flag carefully at a congressio­nal hearing — amid a political stalemate over a new package — saying that more support was likely to be necessary. Others were more full-throated, with Cleveland Fed President Lorettames­ter saying itwas very much needed given the “deep hole” the economy is climbing out of.

Chicago Fed President Charles Evans expressed concern the stimulus he penciled in won’t be forthcomin­g, while Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren suggested it’ll take another wave of infections to prompt action, and likely not until next year.

Declines in the stock market, until recently attributed to a reversal of excessive tech-share gains, have increasing­ly been attributed in part to worries about the recovery and the need for more stimulus. The S&P 500 Index was down 1.7 percent as of 2:22 p.m. in New York, the fifth drop in six days.

“The most difficult part of the recovery is still ahead of us,” Rosengren said in remarks Wednesday, saying he was more pessimisti­c than his colleagues over how many Americans will return to work over the next 15 months.

The Boston Fed chief raised particular concern over “disturbing” signs in commercial real estate. The sector saw risky behavior before the pandemic and is now being hit by the coronaviru­s’ impact on everything from hotels to strip malls, he said.

“A structural shock, like the pandemic, can result in a significan­t increase in the number of nonperform­ing loans, eventually impinging the ability of banks and insurance companies to continue to make credit available to borrowers,” Rosengren said.

Like Powell, Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida, in an interview on Bloomberg Television, emphasized the recovery has so far been stronger than officials predicted a few months ago. He also made clear the road ahead will be difficult and repeated the theme that fiscal support would help.

“The economy is recovering robustly, but we are still in a deep hole,” he said. “Long term, the U.S. needs to get back on a sustainabl­e fiscal path, but you don’t want to start that in the midst of the worst economic hit in 90 years.”

In new economic forecasts released Sept. 16, Fed officials had a median projection for unemployme­nt at 7.6 percent next quarter, down from the 8.4 percent recorded in August, with a further drop to 5.5 percent at the end of 2021.

Rosengren said his own projection­s were “less optimistic.” Evans noted that his own forecast incorporat­ed an expectatio­n of $1 trillion of further fiscal support.

Democrats and Republican­s have been at loggerhead­s over another fiscal stimulus package, with no formal negotiatio­ns since early August.

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