The Mercury News

How the U.S. got it (mostly) right in the economy’s rescue

- By Ben Casselman

When the coronaviru­s pandemic ripped a hole in the economy a year ago, many feared that the United States would repeat the experience of the last recession, when a timid and short-lived government response, in the view of many experts, led to years of high unemployme­nt and anemic wage growth.

Instead, the federal government responded with remarkable force and speed. Within weeks after the virus hit American shores, Congress had launched a multitrill­ion-dollar barrage of programs to expand unemployme­nt benefits, rescue small businesses and send checks to most American households. And this time, unlike a decade ago, Washington is keeping the aid flowing even as the crisis begins to ease: On March 11, President Joe Biden signed a $1.9 trillion aid bill that will pump still more cash into households, businesses, and state and local government­s.

The Federal Reserve, too, acted swiftly, deploying emergency tools developed in the financial crisis a decade earlier. Those efforts helped safeguard the financial system and the central bank has pledged to remain vigilant.

The result is an economy far stronger than most forecaster­s expected last spring, even as the pandemic proved much worse than feared. The unemployme­nt rate has fallen to 6.2%, from nearly 15% in April. Consumer spending is nearly back to its pre-pandemic level. Households are sitting on trillions of dollars in savings that could fuel an epic rebound as the health crisis eases.

Yet not everyone made it into the lifeboats unscathed, if at all. Millions of laid-off workers waited weeks or months to begin receiving help, often with lasting financial consequenc­es. Aid to hundreds of thousands of small businesses dried up long before they could welcome back customers; many will never reopen. Long lines at food banks and desperate pleas for help on social media reflected the number of people who slipped through the cracks.

“The damage that has been done has occurred in a disparate fashion,” said Michelle Holder, a John Jay College economist who has studied the pandemic’s impact. “It’s occurred among low-income families. It’s occurred among Black and brown families. It’s certainly occurred among families that did not have a lot of resources to fall back on.”

Jesus Quinonez lost his job as a manager at a warehouse in the San Diego area early in the pandemic. He quickly found another job with a company that shut down before he could begin work. He has not worked since.

It took Quinonez, 62, three months to fight his way through California’s overwhelme­d unemployme­nt insurance system and begin receiving benefits. Less than two months later, a $600-a-week unemployme­nt supplement from the federal government expired, leaving Quinonez, his wife and his four children trying to subsist on a few hundred dollars a week in regular unemployme­nt benefits.

By January, Quinonez was four months behind on rent on the onebedroom trailer he shares with his family. He had raided his 401(k) account, leaving no savings a few years before his intended retirement. Government nutrition assistance kept his family fed, but it didn’t help with the car payment, or pay for toilet paper.

“I started falling behind on my bills, plain and simple,” he said.

But in December, Congress passed a $900 billion aid package, which included a second round of direct checks to households and revived the expanded unemployme­nt programs. By January, Quinonez was able to pay off a least part of his debt, enough to hold on to the trailer and his car. The next round of aid should carry Quinonez until he can work again.

“As soon as they lift the restrictio­ns and more people get vaccinated, I see things coming back good,” he said. “I expect to get a job, and I expect to continue working until I retire.”

Whether Quinonez’s story — and millions more like it — should count as a success or failure for public policy is partly a matter of perspectiv­e. Quinonez himself is unimpresse­d: He worked and paid taxes for decades, then found himself subject to a decrepit state computer system and a divided Congress.

“Now that we need them, there’s no freaking help,” he said.

Research from Eliza Forsythe, an economist at the University of Illinois, found that from June until Feb. 17, only 41% of unemployed workers had access to benefits. Some of the rest were unaware of their eligibilit­y or could not navigate the thicket of rules in their states. Others simply were not eligible. Asian workers, Black workers and those with less education were disproport­ionately represente­d among the non-recipients.

The gaps and delays in the system had consequenc­es.

“The impact of that is folks having to move out of their apartments because they have this money that’s supposed to be coming but they just haven’t received it,” said Rebecca Dixon, executive director of the National Employment Law Project, a worker advocacy group. Others kept their homes because of eviction bans, but had their utilities shut off, Dixon added, or turned to food banks to avoid going hungry measures of food insecurity surged in the pandemic.

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Shoppers wear masks as they shop at Broadway Plaza in Walnut Creek on Nov. 21, 2020. The U.S. economy is recovering, with consumer spending nearly back to its pre-pandemic level.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF ARCHIVES Shoppers wear masks as they shop at Broadway Plaza in Walnut Creek on Nov. 21, 2020. The U.S. economy is recovering, with consumer spending nearly back to its pre-pandemic level.

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