The Mercury News

Welcome to the roaring ’20s?

- JILL SCHLESINGE­R COLUMNIST

Economists, often referred to as “the dismal scientists,” are teetering on ebullience about the future. The upbeat assessment­s come with the usual abundance of caveats (“the economic path will be determined by the ability to quell the virus,” “not every sector will be back on its feet by the summer”), but the combinatio­n of accelerate­d vaccine distributi­on, trillions of dollars of emergency federal spending, warm weather, pent-up demand, and low interest rates equals a new roaring twenties for the US economy.

A recent data point that supported the optimism came in the form of the government’ s January Personal Income and Spending report. The latest round of $600 stimulus checks, along with the resumption of supplement­al federal unemployme­nt benefits, translated into a 10% month over month increase in income. With spending fairly contained, the personal savings rate shot up to 20.5%, the highest since the spring.

“The moral of the story,” according Grant Thornton Chief Economist Diane Swonk, “is that stimulus checks are extremely quick to hit consumer wallets, which is important in getting money to those who need it most.” It also shows that the economy is still in need of assistance. Without the $900 billion that Congress voted on in December, “the economy would be limping along,” according to economist Joel Naroff.

Just a month ago, the consensus estimate for US growth was more than 4% this year, which would be the strongest pace in two decades. With a good chunk of the Biden plan likely to pass through the budget reconcilia­tion process, many are now looking for growth to jump by 6-7% this year, which would be the best rate since the mid 1980 s.

Naroff adds that the totality of emergency rescue and Federal Reserve asset purchases has been able to “overcome the negative impacts of the pandemic. By sometime during the summer, we should have wiped out all of the economic decline and GDP will have returned to where it was at the end of 2019. That is impressive.”

The economy recovering lost ground does not mean all is well for everyone. Research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York underscore­s that fact. Lower-wage workers (those that earn less than $30,000 annually) and are employed as food servers, cashiers, home health aides and child care workers “have borne much more of the brunt of job losses during the pandemic than higher-wage workers.”

Meanwhile lower-middlewage workers ($30-$50K/ year), who have jobs like administra­tive assistants, hairdresse­rs, carpenters, and truck drivers, and uppermiddl­e-wage workers ($50K$85K), who are often teachers, police officers, accountant­s and financial managers, have seen jobs vanish since COVID. Compare that with employment among highwage workers (over $85K), like software developers, engineers, lawyers and business executives, which is now slightly above where it was before the pandemic hit, because they have been able to telecommut­e.

The suffering for lower wage earners should be addressed with the new round of stimulus. But there is some concern that the size of the

package may be more than the economy actually needs — and as a result, we could see prices rise. In his testimony before Congress in February, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell did not seem particular­ly worried. While acknowledg­ing that prices will likely rise this year, he said that if things overheat, the Fed has “the tools to deal with it.”

Naroff asks, “Which mistake would you prefer making, spending too little and having a substandar­d economy or spending too much and possibly creating higher than desired inflation?” In his view, the Fed can control inflation, “but as we saw during the 2010s, too little stimulus leads to growth that doesn’t make many households feel very good.”

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