Oman Daily Observer

Fed policymake­rs split on need for fiscal aid

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WASHINGTON: As the White House and Congressio­nal Democrats press for a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package that many Republican­s say is more than what the country needs or can afford, Federal Reserve policymake­rs are also split on the issue.

“We are still in the teeth of this pandemic — and we are not out of the woods yet’’, Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan told the Chicago Council on Global Affairs in an online event.

He forecast, as vaccines get rolled out and more businesses can reopen, the US economy will likely grow about 5 per cent this year, enough to push unemployme­nt down to 4.5 per cent, from 6.7 per cent in December.

That forecast, he said, assumes no further fiscal relief, except what may be needed to ensure there’s enough money to vaccinate people and reopen schools, and for the unemployed to make ends meet — an amount he didn’t quantify.

Minneapoli­s Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari, among the central bank’s most dovish policymake­rs, had a more expansive view of fiscal relief, likening it to “wartime spending” and noting that the government has plenty of capacity for issuing debt to pay for it.

Kashkari also suggested he supports stimulus cheques, a key part of President Joe Biden’s proposal opposed by Republican critics who contend that many who get the checks may not actually need them. Biden’s $1400 payments would come on top of the $600 cheques in the package Congress passed in December, and the $1200 cheques included in the first round of pandemic relief.

“It’s very hard to design a government programme for the whole US economy that is effectivel­y targeted that doesn’t leave lots of people out’’, Kashkari told an online seminar held by Montana’s Bureau of Business and Economic Research.

“The checques are like spraying water against the fire: Sometimes you just need water.”

The United States has been devastated by Covid-19, with more than 26 million Americans infected so far, and more than 441,000 dying in total.

Despite strength in the housing sector and some other segments of the economy, the recession is far from over. Some 18 million Americans are drawing on some form of unemployme­nt insurance, many in hard-hit service industries like restaurant­s, travel and hotels.

Congress and the White House, not the Fed, will decide how much stimulus will be rolled out, but what is actually necessary remains a matter of heated debate.

West Virginia Governor Jim Justice, a Republican, said he supports more fiscal relief.

“If we actually throw away some money right now, so what’’, he told CNN on Monday.

West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat, has said relief should be targeted to those who need it.

Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic summed up the general confusion.

“It is hard for me to say exactly what the right number is. There is so much uncertaint­y going on right now’’, Bostic told CNBC.

“What I am looking at right now... is what is happening over the next six months, 12 months, and trying to get a sense of where businesses are, get a sense of how families are weathering the storm... and what we’ll look like in the summer time when I am hopeful that so much of the vaccine will be through the population.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? A man walks past Federal Reserve logo in Washington.
— Reuters A man walks past Federal Reserve logo in Washington.

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