Texarkana Gazette

No stimulus means economy’s fate uncertain

- Connor Sen

With the breakdown of U.S. fiscal relief talks, the timeline for a robust economic recovery might now be an early 2021 story. By that point the distributi­on of vaccines for the coronaviru­s might be underway, and an election win by Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden, which looks increasing­ly likely, could usher in the kind of fiscal relief package that Republican­s have blocked.

The extent to which vaccines and fiscal stimulus boost the economy in January or February is unknowable, but the timeline looks plausible. The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has said it wants two months of safety data for vaccine candidates before considerin­g giving emergency use authorizat­ion for a vaccine. With five vaccine candidates in the U.S. in advanced phase three trials — two since late July — that would mean the earliest we’d start to see limited vaccine deployment is near the end of the year.

And if President Donald Trump or Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell hold up fiscal relief before the election, then it might require a Democratic electoral sweep and the inaugurati­on of a new administra­tion in late January for Congress to provide the kind of comprehens­ive fiscal stimulus that will accelerate the recovery.

The issue is getting to that point without the economy backslidin­g or suffering the kind of enduring damage that could set back recovery for years.

The good news is that as we enter October, the private sector continues to show steady momentum. Last week’s jobs report showed that hours worked by private sector employees accelerate­d slightly in September from August, and have grown at around 1% sequential­ly for three consecutiv­e months.

The housing market remains strong, with buyer demand steady and inventorie­s continuing to decline. Rising home prices and an advancing stock market continue to lead to greater household wealth, even with millions of households and small businesses still struggling. Manufactur­ing surveys point to at least a short-term increase in demand and production as businesses restock inventorie­s that have been depleted the past several months.

And as we saw in the August personal income and personal spending data, the personal saving rate, which has been elevated since the onset of the pandemic, can act as a cushion for spending even if household incomes stagnate or decline. Personal income fell by 2.7% in August as some of the aid passed by Congress in the Cares Act expired. Despite that decline, personal spending grew by 1.0%. The net impact is that the personal saving rate fell to 14.1% in August from 17.7% in July, compared to a pre-pandemic normal range of 6% to 8%. This dynamic might not be sustainabl­e, but given its elevated level, it could last for several more months.

The most significan­t headwind for the economy through the end of the year might be the harm done to state and local government budgets by a lack of fiscal relief. Public sector employment fell by 182,000 in September, which is why the overall level of job growth slowed. Perhaps we get a few more months of numbers like that as municipali­ties seek to cut costs to balance their budgets.

It’s possible that vaccines fail to materializ­e by the end of the year, and the 2016 election is a constant reminder that October polling is no guarantee of November election results. But vaccines and a Democratic sweep are a fairly plausible possibilit­y over the next few months.

No doubt, state and local government budget cuts and a wave of small-business failures are going to mean a slower, more uneven recovery over the next few months than we could’ve had with more robust fiscal relief from Congress.

Despite that, there’s enough economic momentum and cushion in household budgets and balance sheets to keep some sort of recovery going for the next crucial few months, with the hope that once we get to January, medical and legislativ­e breakthrou­ghs can make 2021 a better year.

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