Fast reopening may imperil recovery
When the coronavirus erupted in the United States, it triggered quarantines, travel curbs and business shutdowns. Many economists predicted a Vshaped journey for the economy: A sharp drop, then a quick bounceback as the virus faded and the economy regained health.
Others envisioned a slower, Ushaped course.
Now, as President Trump and many Republicans press to reopen the economy, some experts see an ominous risk: That a toohasty relaxation of social distancing could ignite a resurgence of COVID19 cases by fall, sending the economy back into lockdown. The result: a Wshaped disaster in which a tentative recovery would sink back into a “doubledip” recession before rebounding eventually.
“The push to reopen the economy is making a Wshaped recovery very much more likely,” said Jeffrey Frankel, professor of capital formation and growth at the Harvard Kennedy School.
In Frankel’s view, any widespread reopening should wait for a sustained drop in death rates and the broad availability of tests. No one is completely safe until an effective treatment or vaccine can be produced and widely distributed — a scenario that’s likely many months away.
Frankel said he also worries that the government might prematurely withdraw financial aid to the economy, thereby weakening the pillars of any tentative recovery.
“A Wshaped recovery is a distinct possibility,” said Yongseok Shin, an economist at Washington University in St. Louis and a research fellow at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. “Unless the reopening is carefully managed with extensive testing and voluntary social distancing, infections will rapidly rise in many localities.
“People will then hunker down for fear of infection, and local governments will reimpose lockdowns, quashing any economic recovery we will have had to that point.”
A doubledip recession would significantly heighten the risks for an already debilitated U.S. economy. Congress has provided roughly $3 trillion in aid — by far its largest rescue ever — to help households and companies survive the next few months. That shortterm aid, though, assumes any recovery will last. If a second downturn were to flare up, it’s far from clear that Congress would be ready to offer trillions more to enable businesses to survive yet another round of monthslong shutdowns.
Nor do many companies have the cash reserves to cushion against a second recession. And just as threatening, a doubletip downturn would sap the confidence of individuals and businesses that is essential to an economic bounceback. If consumers don’t trust that a recovery will last, many won’t resume spending, and the economy would struggle to rebound.
This week, plastic spacing barriers and millions of masks appeared on the streets of Europe’s newly reopened cities as France and Belgium emerged from lockdowns, the Netherlands sent children back to school and Spain allowed people to eat outdoors. All faced the delicate balance of restarting battered economies without causing a second wave of coronavirus infections.
In the United States, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has urged caution in reopening the economy. Powell has warned against taking “too much risk of second and third waves” of the virus.
For now, the economy is essentially in free fall. It shed a record 20.5 million jobs in April. The unemployment rate surged to 14.7%, the highest since the Great Depression. The gross domestic product — the broadest measure of output — shrank at a 4.8% annual rate from January through March and is expected to post an astounding 40% annual collapse in the current quarter. That would be, by far, the worst on record dating to 1947.
Facing a catastrophe in an election year, Trump and many Republican allies are eager to ease restrictions and restart the economy. They say the use of masks and other protections should allow many businesses to safely reopen under certain guidelines. Trump has openly backed protests that are intended to compel governors to “liberate” their states from lockdowns.
But the Associated Press reported last week that many governors are disregarding White House guidelines. Seventeen states didn’t meet a key benchmark set by the White House for beginning to reopen businesses: A 14day downward trajectory in new cases or positive test rates.
Texas’ Republican lieutenant governor, Dan Patrick, has gone so far as to suggest that restarting the economy might be worth the risk of some additional deaths.
“There are more important things than living,” Patrick said in an interview with Fox News. “I don’t want to die, nobody wants to die, but man, we got to take some risks and get back in the game and get this country back up and running.”
Most Americans say they’re wary of trying to return to business as normal now. A Pew Research Center survey found that 68% said they feared that state governments would lift restrictions too soon. Just 31% wanted restrictions lifted sooner.
Many businesses are also tempering their optimism. The data firm Womply found that even in Texas and Florida, states that are being especially aggressive about reopening their economies, businesses are moving slowly. Womply found only a “smalltonegligible drop” in the share of Texas and Florida businesses that remain closed.
At Big Buzz, a health care marketing consultancy in Denver, CEO Wendy Phillips is expecting “more a Wshaped than a Vshaped” rebound. Phillips has reduced her staff from eight to six, two of whom kept their fulltime jobs only after the government delivered a $105,000 loan under a rescue program for small businesses.
“There’s so much unknown looking forward,” Phillips said. “I think it’s going to be a good two or three years, at a minimum, of recession.”