speeches · May 3, 2020
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2020
The past two months have been painful across the country. We have lost lives. We have lost
tens of millions of jobs. We have lost security, connectivity and community.
Multiple states are now in the process of reopening their economies. But, despite
unprecedented measures by both the Fed and �scal authorities, things won’t be returning
to normal quickly. As I wrote a few weeks ago, the pace will likely be slow, as businesses
and consumers adapt to a world where personal interaction creates health risks.
As the United States navigates the path to recovery, I have been focusing on how much
damage has been done and how to minimize the longer-term impact.
The potential of our economy can be described most simply as the size of the workforce
multiplied by the productivity of that workforce. In the aftermath of this crisis, both factors
face threats.
This virus has led to the closure of schools and day cares, while also challenging traditional
forms of elder care. Dual career couples, single parents and care providers face daunting
obstacles to balancing work and home responsibilities. Without more support, many risk
leaving the workforce. Vulnerable populations such as baby boomers may protect their
health by retreating from the labor force too. The great number of service workers
dislocated by the pandemic may struggle to move into new careers. And new immigration
controls may well reduce immigration’s historic role in helping grow the workforce. In an
environment where demographic changes were already shrinking our complement of
prime-age workers, these changes could accelerate its decline.
I also worry about productivity. While new protocols for health and social distancing in
restaurants, retail and manufacturing operations will likely help boost consumer and
employee con�dence, there’s little doubt they will also increase costs. Businesses are
already redesigning their previously optimized supply chains to refocus on resiliency at the
expense of e�ciency. And as businesses adapt to the new world, real estate assets are
being stranded. More fundamentally, increased debt loads, reduced bank lending capacity
and diminished con�dence surely will have a meaningful impact on investment, through
which much productivity enhancement occurs.
A smaller, less-productive workforce leads to a smaller economy and a less attractive
future. What can our country do to mitigate that potential impact?
First, as states plan to restart their economies, it will be important to implement safe,
reliable and a�ordable modi�cations to current practices. To get people back to work in
force, we need schools teaching, day cares operating and elder care models that protect
our seniors. At the Richmond Fed, we are engaged in an e�ort in Virginia to reimagine how
child care in particular can be provided at necessary standards.
If we continue living in the shadow of this virus, job retraining will also need to be a focus —
targeted toward the large number of low-end service workers displaced by this crisis. Can
they be retrained to work in a large infrastructure e�ort or to provide an in-demand service
such as home health care? One bright spot of the current shutdown has been the
investment made in online educational delivery. States may �nd that they can deploy
signi�cant online retraining e�orts to a broad swath of the unemployed, perhaps even at a
very low cost (recognizing the need for equal access to broadband).
And, in the spirit of never wasting a crisis, policymakers need to motivate business
investment in new productivity levers. I am reminded that airline kiosk adoption really only
took o� after the tragedy of 9/11. Perhaps retail self-checkout, food delivery, telehealth
and, yes, online education will see similar adoption escalation, as surely online shopping
will as well. Perhaps new productivity investments will need some government incentive to
restore con�dence in an uncertain environment.
It is hard to be optimistic when you are in the depths of a crisis, as we are now. But I’m a big
believer in science and its ability to help us meet the challenges ahead. I’m also a big
believer in the creative capacity of American workers and businesses. As an economic
policymaker, I see the task ahead as providing them with the support they need to unleash
their potential.
Employment and Labor Markets Production and Investment
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2020, May 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200504_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20200504_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2020},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200504_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}