The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Economist: Stimulus will help continue recovery from pandemic

- Staff report newsroom@troyrecord.com newsroom@saratogian.com

WASHINGTON » Economic challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic will continue in 2021, but stimulus legislatio­n signed into law just after Christmas will help maintain and accelerate the nation’s ongoing recovery, according to National Retail Federation chief economist Jack Kleinhenz.

“As we closed out 2020, it was an end to a whirlwind year whose challengin­g economic environmen­t will almost certainly continue in 2021,” Kleinhenz said in a recent press release from the federation. “The coming year might be just as eventful as the economic recovery faces many uncertaint­ies.

“Recoveries do not proceed in a straight line and the prospects for volatility over the next few months are high. Nonetheles­s, just like the old Timex watch commercial­s, the economy takes a licking but keeps on ticking.”

“We expect retail sales spending to see a boost fromthe new round of stimulus,” Kleinhenz continued. “Consumers responded quickly to last spring’s stimulus checks, and distributi­on of the new checks will come at a critical time that will help carry 2020’s momentum into 2021.”

Legislatio­n signed Dec. 27 provides one-time $600 stimulus checks to individual­s making up to $75,000 a year and extends $300 weekly checks for the unemployed for almost three months.

The new aid is particular­ly important to low-income families and the unemployed, who have faced challenges paying day-to- day bills in recent months, Kleinhenz said in the release.

Kleinhenz’s remarks in the January issue of NRF’s Monthly Economic Review, said economic activity will likely pick up after the winter months and into mid-year as COVID-19 vaccines allow more activities to resume. The availabili­ty of a vaccine during the first quarter – historical­ly a soft spot in the economy every year even without a pandemic – “couldn’t be better,” he said in the release.

Though full recovery has yet to come, the economy hasmade considerab­le progress, the release said, noting that retail sales for the first 11 months of

2020 (excluding automobile dealers, gasoline stations and restaurant­s) were up 6.6 percent over the same period in 2019 and November’s year- over-year increase of 8.8 percent put the holiday season on track to meet NRF’s forecast of between 3.6 percent and 5.2 percent growth. Results for the full holiday season will be known when the Census Bureau releases December’s numbers on January 15.

Some of the money normally spent on traveling, dining out and entertainm­ent shifted from services to goods in 2020, especially big- ticket home- related items like appliances and furniture, the report said.

Rising wealth from increasing home values and stock prices have supported additional consumer purchases of retail goods, and the new stimulus checks should encourage consumers to “reengage” on nondurable goods and services, it continued.

While consumer spending and retail sales have largely returned, results have varied among retail sectors and “economic uncertaint­y is very prevalent and at near-record levels,” the report concluded.

Overall economic activity is not expected to return to pre-pandemic levels until late 2021, according to the NRF, and employment at pre-pandemic levels is unlikely to return until well into 2022 or possibly 2023.

 ?? NICHOLAS BUONANNO — MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE ?? Shopper Carly Bennett browses merchandis­e at Anchor No. 5 Boutique in downtown Troy. With new stimulus legislatio­n, the National Retail Federation expects retail sales spending to see a boost nationwide in early 2021.
NICHOLAS BUONANNO — MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE Shopper Carly Bennett browses merchandis­e at Anchor No. 5 Boutique in downtown Troy. With new stimulus legislatio­n, the National Retail Federation expects retail sales spending to see a boost nationwide in early 2021.
 ?? GLENN GRIFFITH — MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE ?? Shoppers walk through Wilton Mall while wearing masks on Black Friday 2020. With new stimulus legislatio­n, the National Retail Federation expects retail sales spending to see a boost nationwide in early 2021.
GLENN GRIFFITH — MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE Shoppers walk through Wilton Mall while wearing masks on Black Friday 2020. With new stimulus legislatio­n, the National Retail Federation expects retail sales spending to see a boost nationwide in early 2021.

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