Texarkana Gazette

Giving $1,000 checks is not enough

- Jon Healey

Washington’s thinking about how to respond to the novel coronaviru­s seems to be mutating faster than the virus is. And that’s a good thing.

Just a few weeks after seeming to dismiss the virus as a minor threat, President Trump is now talking about pouring $1 trillion or more into the U.S. economy to help families and businesses cope with the strain caused by the disease — and in particular, by the closures and restrictio­ns imposed by some states and cities to hold down infections. A centerpiec­e of the plan outlined Tuesday by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is sending checks of more than $1,000 to households across the country, showering the country with $250 billion in cash in a matter of weeks; a second round worth $500 billion would go out a month later if the situation hadn’t improved.

Such cash infusions typically aim to spark a burst of consumer spending at a time when it’s lagging and, with luck, generate more than $1 in economic activity for every $1 doled out. The feds have made it rain cash before in response to a downturn — in fact, President George W. Bush did it twice, in 2001 and 2008, and President Obama did it in 2009. But this time the layoffs, lost wages and other economic problems are not the gradually accumulati­ng casualties of the business cycle or excessive risk-taking, but the sudden consequenc­es of an external event.

“This is different from every recession in my lifetime, in your lifetime,” said Leonard E. Burman, a fellow at the Urban Institute think tank and co-founder of the Tax Policy Center. “There’s just a whole bunch of economic activity that has to end just because of the public health issue.”

Jay Shambaugh, an economist who directs The Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institute, said that some observers have likened the current situation to the economic disruption caused by the 9/11 terrorist attacks. But in those days, he noted, “People were saying, ‘The patriotic thing is to go out and live your life.’ Here, the patriotic thing is to stay at home. … (That’s) very unusual for the economy.”

That’s why the rationale for sending out checks now would be to guard against things getting significan­tly worse, rather than to jumpstart the economy back to normalcy, at least for now. The drop we’re facing is that big and that sudden.

As the Los Angeles Times editorial board noted earlier this week, one of the drawbacks of tossing checks out right and left is that they’ll land on people who don’t need them as well as people who do. Those people may simply put the cash into the bank, rather than spending it in ways that could help struggling businesses stay afloat and endangered workers keep their jobs.

But the economists I interviewe­d said it’s much more important to get the aid out quickly than it is to target it precisely. Congress needs to worry about people being unable to pay their bills, falling behind on their rent or feeling the need to keep working when they really should be self-quarantine­d.

More pressing questions for lawmakers are whether the government can deliver the money right away to meet the pressing need and whether a one-time injection of money will be sufficient.

The answer to the first question is maybe. Mnuchin told lawmakers that the administra­tion hoped to have the first round of checks in the mail by the end of next month — a six week delay. That would be brisk by the standards set in 2008 and 2009, when it took Washington months to get the checks out the door. The delays back then were caused in part by the decision not to send the same amount to every taxpayer, which made the checks more complicate­d to administer. A more straightfo­rward approach could lead to quicker relief.

As for whether one injection of cash will be sufficient, the answer is probably not, for at least two reasons.

First, economists hope that just as the coronaviru­s caused the economy to decelerate sharply, the end of the crisis will allow for a speedy resumption of growth. But no one knows how long the disruption will last, given that specialize­d treatments for COVID-19 may not hit the market for months and a vaccine for a year and a half or more.

But second, the cash individual­s receive won’t help many of the small and midsized businesses that are struggling today because it won’t reach them. That’s why some type of aid is needed to help businesses endure the virus, possibly by extending them low-interest loans. Mnuchin’s plan also includes $300 billion worth of loans to small businesses and a delay in the April 15 due date for income tax payments.

So far, there’s been little grumbling from lawmakers about the enormous potential cost of these interventi­ons. And that’s appropriat­e, considerin­g the damage that would be done to workers, businesses and the economy as a whole if Congress sat on its hands.

“We have access to cheap money,” Burman said, referring to the exceptiona­lly low interest rates on Treasury bills. “If we were not willing to borrow to address this crisis, it would compound the disaster.”

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