San Antonio Express-News

State of nation’s economy growing worrisome due to virus

- By Martin Crutsinger and Paul Wiseman

that struck in early spring.

Thenumbero­famericans seeking unemployme­nt aid rose last week for a second straight week to WASHINGTON — In the grip of 778,000, evidence that many emthe accelerati­ng viral outbreak, ployers still are slashing jobs more the U.S. economy is under presthan eight months after the virus hit.surefrompe­rsistentla­yoffs,di

B minished income and nervous efore the pandemic, weekly consumers, whose spending is jobless claims typically amounted needed to drive a recovery from to only about 225,000. Layoffs still the pandemic. are historical­ly high, with many

A flurry of data released Wedbusines­ses unable to fully reopen nesday suggested the spread of and some, especially restaurant­s the virus is intensifyi­ng the threats and bars, facing tightened restricto an economy still struggling to tions. recover from the deep recession Consumers increased their spending last month by just 0.5 percent, the weakest rise since the pandemic erupted.

The tepid figure suggested that on the eve of the crucial holiday shopping season, Americans remain anxious with the virus spreading and Congress failing to enact any further aid for struggling individual­s, businesses, cities and states.

At the same time, the government said Wednesday that income, which provides the fuel for consumer spending, fell 0.7 percent in October.

The spike in virus cases is heightenin­g pressure on companies and individual­s, with fear growing that the economy could suffer a “double-dip” recession as states and cities reimpose curbs on businesses.

The economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, is expected to eke out a modest gain this quarter before weakening — and perhaps shrinking — early next year.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, predicts annual GDP growth of around 2 percent in the October-december quarter, with the possibilit­y of GDP turning negative in the first quarter of 2021.

Economists at Jpmorgan Chase have slashed their forecast for the first quarter to a negative1p­ercent annual GDP rate.

“This winter will grim,” they wrote in a search note.

Zandi warned that until Congress agrees on a new stimulus plan to replace a now-expired multitrill­iondollar aid package enacted in the spring, the threat to the economy will grow.

“The economy is going to be very uncomforta­ble between nowandwhen­we get the next fiscal rescue package,” Zandi said. “If lawmakers can’t get it together, it will be very difficult for the economy to avoid going back into a recession.”

Some corners of the economy still show strength, or at least resilience.

Manufactur­ing is one. The government said Wednesday that orders for durable goods rose 1.3 percent in October, a sign that purchases of goods remain solid evenwhile the economy’s much larger service sector — everything from restaurant­s, hotels and airlines to be re

gyms, hair salons and entertainm­ent venues — still is struggling.

Economists caution, though, that factories, too, remain at risk from the surge in coronaviru­s cases, which could throttle demand in coming months.

And sales of new homes remained steady in October, the latest sign that ultralow mortgage rates and a paucity of properties for sale have spurred demand and made the housing market a rare economic bright spot.

But at the heart of the economy are the job market and consumer spending, which remain especially vulnerable to the spike in virus cases.

Most economists say the distributi­on of an effective vaccine likely would reinvigora­te growth next year. Yet they warn any sustained recovery also will hinge on whether Congress can agree soon on a sizable aid package to carry the economy through what could be a bleak winter.

“With infections continuing to rise at an elevated pace and curbs on business

operations widening, layoffs are likely to pick upover coming weeks,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.

The government said he total number of people who are continuing to receive traditiona­l state unemployme­nt benefits dropped to 6.1 million from 6.4 million the previous week.

That figure has been declining for months. It shows more Americans are finding jobs and no longer receiving unemployme­nt aid. But it also indicates many jobless people have used up their state unemployme­nt aid — which typically expires after six months.

More Americans are collecting benefits under programs that were set up to cushion the economic pain from the pandemic.

For the week of Nov. 7, the number of people collecting benefits under the Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program — which offers coverage to gig workers and others who don’t qualify for traditiona­l aid — rose by 466,000 to 9.1 million.

And the number of people receiving aid under the Pandemic Emergency Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program — which offers 13 weeks of federal benefits to those who have exhausted state jobless aid — rose by 132,000 to 4.5 million.

The data firm Womply says 21percent of small businesses were shuttered at the start of this month, reflecting a steady increase from June’s 16 percent rate.

Consumer spending at local businesses is down 27 percent this month from a year ago, marking a deteriorat­ion from a 20 percent year-over-year drop in October, Womply found.

The heart of the problem is an untamed virus: The number of confirmed infections in the United States has shot up to more than 170,000 a day, from fewer than 35,000 in early September. The arrival of cold weather in much of the country could further worsen the health crisis.

Meanwhile, another economic threat looms: Theimpendi­ng expiration of the two supplement­al federal unemployme­nt programs the day after Christmas could end benefits completely for 9.1 million jobless people. Congress has failed for months to agree on any new stimulus aid for jobless individual­s and struggling businesses after the expiration of a multi-trillion dollar rescue package it enacted in March.

The expiration of benefits will make it harder for the unemployed to make rent payments, afford food or keep up with utility bills. Most economists agree that because unemployed people tend to quickly spend their benefits, such aid is effective in boosting the economy.

When the viral outbreak struck in early spring, employers slashed 22 million jobs in March and April, sending the unemployme­nt rate rocketing to 14.7 percent, the highest rate since the Great Depression.

Since then, the economy has regained more than 12 million jobs. Yet the nation still has about10mil­lion fewer jobs than it did before the pandemic erupted.

All of which has left many Americans anxious and uncertain. The Conference Board, a business research group, reported Tuesday that consumer confidence weakened in November, pulled down by lowered expectatio­ns for the next six months.

And the University of Michigan’s Surveys of Consumers reported Wednesday that sentiment declined slightly this month, and remained far below where it was before the pandemic struck. With the resurgence of the virus depressing the outlook of consumers, the sentiment index fell to its lowest point since August.

“Gloomier consumer expectatio­ns will weigh on spending as the holidays approach,” cautioned Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. financial economist at Oxford Economics.

 ?? David Zalubowski / Associated Press ?? Rows of boxed big-screen television­s sit on display at a Costco warehouse in Sheridan, Colo.
David Zalubowski / Associated Press Rows of boxed big-screen television­s sit on display at a Costco warehouse in Sheridan, Colo.
 ?? James Estrin / New York Times ?? People receive donated food supplies in upper Manhattan earlier this month. The need for food donations has grown as high unemployme­nt persists.
James Estrin / New York Times People receive donated food supplies in upper Manhattan earlier this month. The need for food donations has grown as high unemployme­nt persists.

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