The Guardian (USA)

The $2,000 stimulus cheques alone won't work – the US needs better infrastruc­ture

- Barry Eichengree­n

With the Democrats’ stunning sweep of Georgia’s two Senate run-off elections giving them control of both houses of Congress as of 20 January, the idea of $2,000 stimulus cheques for every household is sure to be back on the agenda in the US. But although targeted relief for the unemployed should unquestion­ably be a priority, it is not clear that $2,000 cheques for all would in fact help to sustain the US economic recovery.

One post-pandemic scenario is a vigorous demand-driven recovery as people gorge on restaurant meals and other pleasures they’ve missed for the past year. Many Americans have ample funds to finance a splurge. Personal savings rates soared following the disburseme­nt of $1,200 cheques last spring. Many recipients now expect to save their recent $600 relief payments, either because they have been spared the worst of the recession or because spending opportunit­ies remain locked down.

So, when it’s safe to go out again, the spending floodgates will open, supercharg­ing the recovery. The Fed has already promised to “look through” – that is, to disregard – any temporary inflation resulting from this euphoria.

But we shouldn’t dismiss the possibilit­y of an alternativ­e scenario in which consumers instead display continued restraint, causing last year’s high savings rates to persist. Prior to the Covid-19 crisis, some two-thirds of US households lacked the savings to replace six weeks of take-home pay. Having reminded Americans of the precarious­ness of their world, the pandemic is precisely the type of searing experience that induces fundamenta­l changes in behaviour.

We know that living through a large economic shock, especially in young adulthood, can have an enduring impact on people’s beliefs, including those about the prevalence of future shocks. Such changes in outlook are consistent with psychologi­cal research showing that people rely on “availabili­ty heuristics” – intellectu­al shortcuts based on recalled experience – when assessing the likelihood of an event. For those parents unable to put food on the table during the pandemic, the experience will establish a heuristic that will be hard to forget.

Moreover, neurologic­al research shows that economic stress, including from large shocks, increases anabolic steroid hormone levels in the blood, which renders individual­s more riskaverse. Neuroscien­tists have also documented that traumatic stress can cause permanent synaptic changes in the brain that further shape attitudes and behaviour, in this case plausibly in the direction of greater risk aversion.

Though the pandemic is in some ways more akin to a natural disaster than an economic shock, natural disasters also can affect saving patterns: savings rates tend to be higher in countries with a greater incidence of earthquake­s and hurricanes.

This behavioura­l response is largest in developing countries, where weak constructi­on standards amplify the impact of such disasters. One study of Indonesia, for example, found large increases in both the perceived risk of a future disaster and risk-averse behaviour among people who had recently experience­d an earthquake or flood. While the response to natural disasters may be more moderate in advanced economies – where individual­s expect that their government will compensate them – some lasting impact will almost certainly remain.

The upshot is that we can’t count on a burst of US consumer spending to fuel the recovery once the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines is complete. And if private spending remains subdued, continued support from public spending will be necessary to sustain the recovery.

But putting $2,000 cheques in people’s bank accounts won’t solve this problem because unspent money doesn’t stimulate demand. With interest rates already near zero, the availabili­ty of additional funding won’t even encourage investment. Sending out $2,000 cheques to everyone thus would be the fiscal equivalent of pushing on a string.

Fortunatel­y, there is an alternativ­e: the president-elect Joe Biden’s $2tn infrastruc­ture plan would mean additional jobs and spending, which is what the post-pandemic economy really needs. Better still, under the prevailing low interest rates, this option would stimulate job creation without crowding out private investment.

Although Biden’s plan will require more government borrowing, infrastruc­ture spending that has a rate of return of 2% will more than pay for itself when the yield on 10-year US treasury bonds is 1.15%. By raising output, such expenditur­e reduces rather than increases the burden on future generation­s. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund estimates that, under current circumstan­ces, well-targeted infrastruc­ture investment pays for itself in just two years.

Obviously, the “well targeted” part is important. President Donald Trump was right that the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act was loaded with pork, not least his own “three-martini lunch” tax deduction for businesses. There’s every reason to question whether Congress can do better when crafting an infrastruc­ture bill.

In response to this problem, countries such as New Zealand have establishe­d independen­t commission­s to design and monitor infrastruc­ture spending initiative­s. If Covid-19 changes everything, then maybe it can change the way the US government organises infrastruc­ture spending. Creating an independen­t infrastruc­ture commission with real powers would go a long way toward reassuring the sceptics and insuring the recovery against the risks posed by the pandemic’s lingering behavioura­l effects.

 ??  ?? The Hoover Dam in Boulder, Nevada, was part of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s jobs plan of the 1930s, which greatly helped boost the US economy by creating thousands of jobs, giving farmers a dependable water supply and sending cheap electricit­y to growing cities in California. Photograph: Edwin Verin/Alamy Stock Photo
The Hoover Dam in Boulder, Nevada, was part of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s jobs plan of the 1930s, which greatly helped boost the US economy by creating thousands of jobs, giving farmers a dependable water supply and sending cheap electricit­y to growing cities in California. Photograph: Edwin Verin/Alamy Stock Photo

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