Albany Times Union

Powell: No returning to pre-pandemic economy

U.S. has undergone significan­t changes, Fed chairman says

- By Martin Crutsinger

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday that the U.S. economy has been permanentl­y changed by the COVID pandemic and that it is important for the central bank to adapt to those changes.

“We’re not simply going back to the economy that we had before the pandemic,” Powell said at a Fed virtual town hall for educators and students. “We need to watch carefully as the economy continues to get through the pandemic and try to understand the ways that the economy has changed and what the implicatio­ns are for our policy.”

Powell said that while it is not yet clear if the delta variant of COVID will have further impact on the economy, the country has already seen significan­t changes since the pandemic began shutting the country down in March 2020.

Those changes range from the increase in remote work, to restaurant­s offering more takeout meals, to real estate agents learning to show homes virtually, he noted. Many companies have already made large investment­s in technology to adapt to the challenges that the pandemic has presented.

“It seems a near certainty that there will be substantia­lly more remote work going forward,” Powell said. “That’s going to change the nature of work and the way work gets done.”

Powell said the heavy investment by companies in new technology means there will be more jobs in the future associated with maintainin­g that technology but also potential job losses in industries focused on in-person contact. He said some of those industries may be moving to an “automated, nocontact model.”

This trend is already showing up in the jobs data, with the recovery slower in industries that rely on public interactio­n, such as travel, leisure and hospitalit­y. Those are jobs disproport­ionately held by women and people of color and typically pay lower wages, Powell noted.

“It may be that some of these people will have a harder time finding their way back into the workforce without more education and training,” he said. He said there are millions of people who have lost service-sector jobs and remain out of work and need to be supported. “That’s a part of the recovery that’s far from complete,” he said.

Speaking to the audience of students and educators, Powell said the pandemic could turn out to be an historical inflection point that will allow the current generation of students to turn the lessons learned into “profound tools of change.”

Students who have lived through the pandemic will see the world differentl­y, he said.

“You have seen a world upended, but you have also seen a world that is rapidly changing — sometimes more in one week than some of us have experience­d over the course of decades,“he said.

“This is an extraordin­ary time and I believe that it will result in an extraordin­ary generation,” Powell said.

The town hall seeks to highlight the importance of classes in economics.

 ?? Sarabeth Maney / New York Times ?? Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday the U.S. economy has been permanentl­y changed by the COVID pandemic.
Sarabeth Maney / New York Times Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday the U.S. economy has been permanentl­y changed by the COVID pandemic.

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