The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Powell meets a changed economy

Fewer workers, higher prices

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WASHINGTON — Restaurant and hotel owners struggling to fill jobs. Supply-chain delays forcing up prices for small businesses. Unemployed Americans unable to find work even with job openings at a record high.

Those and other disruption­s to the U.S. economy — consequenc­es of the viral pandemic that erupted 18 months ago — appear likely to endure, a group of business owners and nonprofit executives told Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday.

The business challenges, described during a “Fed Listens” virtual roundtable, underscore the ways that the COVID-19 outbreak and its delta variant are continuing to transform the U.S. economy. Some participan­ts in the event said their business plans were still evolving. Others complained of sluggish sales and fluctuatin­g fortunes after the pandemic eased this summer and then intensifie­d in the past two months.

“We are really living in unique times,” Powell said at the end of the discussion. “I’ve never seen these kinds of supply-chain issues, never seen an economy that combines drastic labor shortages with lots of unemployed people. … So, it’s a very fast changing economy.

It’s going to be quite different from the one (before).”

The Fed chair asked Cheetie Kumar, a restaurant owner in Raleigh, North Carolina, why she has had such trouble finding workers. Powell’s question goes to the heart of the Fed’s mandate of maximizing employment, because many people who were working before the pandemic lost jobs and are no longer looking for one. When — or whether — these people resume their job hunts will help determine when the Fed can conclude that the economy has achieved maximum employment.

Kumar told Powell that many of her former employees have decided to permanentl­y leave the restaurant industry.

“I think a lot of people wanted to make life changes, and we lost a lot of people to different industries,“she said. “I think half of our folks decided to go back

to school.”

Kumar said her restaurant now pays a minimum of $18 an hour, and she added that higher wages are likely a long-term change for the restaurant industry.

“We cannot get by and pay people $13 an hour and expect them to stay with us for years and years,” Kumar said. “It’s just not going to happen.”

Loren Nalewanski, a vice president at Marriott Select Brands, said his company is losing housekeepe­rs to other jobs that have recently raised pay. Even the recent cutoff of a $300-aweek federal unemployme­nt supplement, he said, hasn’t led to an increase in job applicants.

“People have left the industry and unfortunat­ely they’re finding other things to do,” Nalewanski said. “Other industries that didn’t pay as much perhaps … are (now) paying a lot more.”

 ?? Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press ?? Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell testifies before a Senate committee in Washington, D.C., in July.
Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell testifies before a Senate committee in Washington, D.C., in July.

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