USA TODAY International Edition

Here’s how to boost economy, experts say

Wall Street wants more fiscal policy, less Fed monetary policy

- Adam Shell

Move over, Fed. Wall Street says it’s Uncle Sam’s turn to get the U. S. economy humming again.

With the days of low interest rates likely nearing an end and Federal Reserve monetary policy losing its power to stimulate growth, Wall Street pros say fiscal policy — government moves to boost economic growth through infrastruc­ture spending, progrowth tax policies and other means — is what’s needed to boost the economy and stocks.

Wall Street says now’s the time for the passing of the baton from stimulus generated by low interest rates to government- driven moves that put more money in Americans’ pockets and spur spending by lowering taxes and creating more full- time and higher- paying jobs. Indeed, even though the September unemployme­nt rate was 5% and near full employment, an estimated 5.9 million workers were working part- time because their hours were cut or they couldn’t land a full- time job, according to the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

And it doesn’t matter who wins the White House. Investors are going to be calling for government to push a growth agenda whether it’s President Clinton or President Trump.

“Regardless of who wins the U. S. presidenti­al race, we see an inevitable shift away from monetary policy toward fiscal policy in the next several years,” said Don Rissmiller, economist at Strategas Research Partners. “The nature of any coming fiscal stimulus will likely determine whether the global economy can break its ( long- term) stagnation.”

Both presidenti­al candidates are proposing healthy dollops of fiscal stimulus.

Front- runner Hillary Clinton has promised the “biggest investment in American infrastruc­ture in decades,” backed up by her

$ 275 billion commitment to put Americans to work to fix the nation’s aging roads, bridges and airports. Clinton also promises tax breaks for working Americans.

Trump has promised a progrowth tax- cut plan that he says will spur job growth and boost economic growth.

Hank Smith, chief investment officer at Haverford Trust, says there’s a chance the U. S. economy, which grew at a 1% rate in the first half of the year and is on track for growth of about 2.5% in the third quarter, could grow at a faster 3% to 3.5% clip if the next president passes pro- growth fiscal policy.

“We could see the so- called 2% recovery accelerate to a 3% recovery,” Smith says.

Under Trump’s tax plan — which would cut the average 2017 tax bill by $ 2,940, with the biggest savings going to high- income earners, according to the Tax Policy Center, a think tank that considers itself non- partisan — the U. S. economy would get a boost in the short run, with its two models showing gross domestic product getting a boost of 1% to 1.7% in 2017 and a 1.1% lift in 2018.

In contrast, Clinton’s plan to boost taxes on the wealthy — which would reduce their aftertax income by 7% but would increase after- tax income for lowand middle- income families by nearly 1% — would actually result in a drag on GDP, with estimates showing a 0.1% to - 0.4% drag in 2017 and a hit to GDP of 0.2% in 2018, according to the TPC’s analysis.

Still, the scope of fiscal stimulus will likely be limited due to increasing odds that Congress will be divided following the Nov. 8 elections.

Wall Street is most comfortabl­e with a status quo government in which a divided Congress will provide checks and balances to whatever party lands in the White House, making it less likely that one party’s platform sails through unconteste­d.

 ?? 2014 PHOTO BY NAM Y. HUH, AP ?? Economists urge government­driven policy moves that create more full- time jobs.
2014 PHOTO BY NAM Y. HUH, AP Economists urge government­driven policy moves that create more full- time jobs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States