National Post (National Edition)

As Fed eyes a move, Democratic-led states lag in jobs recovery

- HOWARD SCHNEIDER

• Hopes to restore U.S. employment to its pre-pandemic level, an aim of the Federal Reserve and the Biden administra­tion, now rest on a recovery of jobs in New England and California, a potentiall­y troubling fact for the president's Democratic Party ahead of critical midterm elections and as the Fed plots a possible turn to tighter monetary policy.

Data released on Friday show that through October employment in states with Republican governors was close to 99 per cent of what it was in February of 2020, while Democratic-led states lagged, at roughly 96 per cent.

While state-level estimates can be volatile, particular­ly month to month, the apparently larger remaining job shortfall in Democratic-leaning areas echoes the choices — and political divisions — that emerged early in the pandemic. States in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic tended to impose stricter measures against the coronaviru­s and keep them in place longer, than Republican-led states in the South and West.

Employment fell more sharply in those areas, and the gap has remained even late in the recovery.

Recovery has come faster than many expected, but it remains uneven. Of 10 states that had more jobs in October of this year than in February 2020, seven had Republican governors and another six GOP-led states were within one percentage point of their pre-pandemic job level. The level of jobs alone doesn't tell the full story, and on key measures like the overall employment-to-population ratio — considered a more complete measure of job market health than the unemployme­nt rate — Republican stronghold­s like Texas and Florida remained well below levels seen before the pandemic crisis.

But the job level does pose a potential challenge for Biden, with important Democratic states like New York and California still fiveper-cent below the pre-pandemic peak, and political battlegrou­nds like Pennsylvan­ia also lagging.

Until recently it seemed the Fed was intent on keeping monetary policy loose and borrowing costs easy for as long as it took to claw those jobs back.

That aim may now be in conflict with the Fed's other goal of stable prices, challenged by a run of inflation that is prompting central bank policy-makers to discuss a faster move to tighter policy, which could slow job growth before areas central to Biden's political chances are able to catch up.

Those dynamics now appear as well to be central to Biden's decision on who to place at the top of the Fed. Current chair Jerome Powell's term is expiring in February, and Biden is expected to make a decision within the next week on whether to reappoint him or replace him, most likely with Fed governor Lael Brainard.

The high inflation rate, which has persisted longer than policy-makers had anticipate­d, is damaging Biden's approval ratings and elevating the importance attached to his choice of central bank chief.

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