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A Forward-Thinking Policy Response to the Coronavirus Recession
Mass layoffs, record unemployment claims <[link removed]>, and an unprecedented demand shock: With GDP projected to decline at least 5 percent <[link removed]> this quarter, the coronavirus pandemic has turned into a full-fledged economic collapse. As Roosevelt Director for Progressive Thought Mike Konczal explains in a new paper, we have the tools to slow the recession and limit its impacts—while laying the tracks for a more resilient economy in the future. For right now, Konczal proposes cash and other direct assistance, strengthened worker protections, direct aid to states and municipalities, federal loans for small businesses, and structured industry bailouts (with terms to prevent future extraction). For the long term: permanent stimulus at 2 percent or more of GDP and a reconception of our fragile social safety net. “Policymakers right now have the chance to put forward a response that meets the moment we’re in: one that is large in size, broad in scope, and sustained over time,” Konczal writes. “There is little risk in doing too much to stabilize the economy; the danger is doing too little.” Read on. <[link removed]>
- Moving forward: “There are three essential aspects to the stimulus plan we urgently need right now: It should be bold and equitable, it should automatically renew, and its temporary programs should be able to evolve into more permanent ones,” Konczal writes for The Nation.Read more. <[link removed]>
- The need for fiscal policy: “It's probably too late to stop a recession, but it's not too late to stop a depression,” Groundwork Collaborative Executive Director and Roosevelt Fellow Michael Lindenwrites for CNN Business <[link removed]>. “Emergency cash payments to nearly all households as soon as possible can help prevent more suffering and boost the economy at the same time. It should be the next step, but it definitely cannot be the last one.” As Roosevelt Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitztold CNBC this week <[link removed]>, “it is clearly a case where targeted fiscal policy is what is needed. It's been true for a long while that monetary policies . . . only have limited efficacy.”
How Much Stimulus Do We Need?
“Is today’s crisis on the scale of 2008’s? It seems very possible that it is. And this time, of course, there is no question of a 5 point fall in interest rates. The federal funds rate coming into the crisis was only 1.5 percent,” Roosevelt Fellow J.W. Mason writes for the blog. “So if we look back to 2008 as a model of the kinds of demand shortfalls our economy can suffer in the face of a severe shock, we should be thinking in terms of a 20 percent fall in private demand . . . And that implies a required stimulus on the order of 13 percent of GDP, or $3 trillion—perhaps sustained over multiple years.” Read on. <[link removed]>
Deficit and Debt Shouldn’t Factor into the Recession Response
“Given the magnitude of the crisis, now is not the time for policymakers to worry about raising deficits and debt as they consider what steps to take,” Roosevelt President & CEO Felicia Wong, Center for American Progress President & CEO Neera Tanden, Washington Center for Equitable Growth President & CEO Heather Boushey, and Center on Budget and Policy Priorities President Bob Greenstein write in a joint statement. “Even Harvard’s Greg Mankiw, who chaired President George W. Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers and who normally worries about rising deficits and debt, has said, ‘There are times to worry about growing government debt. This is not one of them.’” Read more. <[link removed]>
Business Resiliency Requires Banning Stock Buybacks
With hotels asking for a $250 billion bailout <[link removed]> and airlines asking for $50 billion <[link removed]>, their history of stock buybacks <[link removed]> is drawing renewed scrutiny. As Roosevelt Fellow Lenore Palladino writes for the blog, in the last five years, companies like Marriott, American Airlines, Delta, and United have spent billions on buybacks, with funds that “could have sustained employees through this crisis in the form of paid sick, medical, and family leave.” Any bailout of the private sector, she writes, “must be conditional on an end to the practice of stock buybacks (a condition President Trump says he is “okay with” <[link removed]>), along with worker representation on corporate boards <[link removed]> going forward, and broader requirements that companies keep workers on their payrolls.” Read on. <[link removed]>
How the Coronavirus Will Change the World Permanently
This week, Politico surveyed 34 big thinkers on their predictions for a post-coronavirus world—including Roosevelt Director of Governance Studies Todd Tucker and Roosevelt Vice President of Advocacy and Policy Steph Sterling. “In the years ahead . . . expect to see more support from Democrats, Republicans, academics, and diplomats for the notion that government has a much bigger role to play in creating adequate redundancy in supply chains—resilient even to trade shocks from allies,” said Tucker. Per Sterling, “The reality of fragile supply chains for active pharmaceutical ingredients coupled with public outrage over patent abuses that limit the availability of new treatments has led to an emerging, bipartisan consensus that the public sector must take far more active and direct responsibility for the development and manufacture of medicines.”Read more. <[link removed]>
What We’re Reading
How South Korea Scaled Coronavirus Testing While the US Fell Dangerously Behind <[link removed]> - ProPublica
The Coronavirus Will Supercharge American Inequality <[link removed]> - The Atlantic
The Coronavirus Pandemic and the Racial Wealth Gap <[link removed]> - Center for American Progress
A Taxonomy of Bailouts: Comparing the Coronavirus Rescues with Rescues Past <[link removed]> - New York Times
What’s the Best Way to Rescue the Economy? <[link removed]> - Mother Jones
A Moderate Proposal: Nationalize the Fossil Fuel Industry <[link removed]> - New Republic
National Civil Justice Reform: A Proposal for New Federal-State Partnerships <[link removed]> - Great Democracy Initiative
Now Is the Time to Cancel Student Debt <[link removed]> - The Nation
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