speeches · June 16, 2020
Regional President Speech
Loretta J. Mester · President
The Outlook for the Economy and Federal Reserve Policy
Loretta J. Mester
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Economists on the Economy
Council for Economic Education
New York, NY
(via videoconference)
June 17, 2020
1
Introduction
Let me start by thanking Nan Morrison and the Council for Economic Education for the opportunity to
speak today. I have the pleasure of serving on the council’s board so I have seen firsthand the important
work the council is doing to increase economic and financial literacy in the country. As the council’s
mission statement explains, equipping students with this knowledge can help them make better decisions
for themselves, their families, and their communities. It is noteworthy that despite the burdens of the
pandemic, the council has found creative ways to carry on its mission, including its support of teachers,
the National Economics Challenge, and this speakers’ series.
Today, before we open it up to questions, I’ll give you an update on the economy and on the Federal
Reserve’s policy response. As always, the views I’ll present are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.
The Current Economy
The coronavirus pandemic is a global public health crisis that has inflicted pain and hardship on people all
over the world. This is an unprecedented situation and unprecedented actions have been taken in
response. The country took aggressive social distancing measures to limit the spread of the virus,
resulting in a shutdown of much of the economy starting in March. This was an investment in public
health that bought some time for the healthcare system to increase its capacity to care for the sick, for
doctors and scientists to learn more about the disease itself, and for the country to begin to develop tests
and treatments. But at the same time, the effect of the shutdown on the economy was swift and severe.
[FIGURE 1] In the first quarter, real output declined at a 5 percent annual rate, with real consumption
down almost 7 percent and nonresidential business fixed investment down nearly 8 percent. These
declines reflect what occurred in a single month, March. Earlier this month, the National Bureau of
Economic Research’s Business Cycle Dating Committee determined that economic activity peaked in
2
February and that the U.S. economy entered a recession. I anticipate that the second quarter will show the
most severe effects of the pandemic shutdown on economic activity. Most private-sector forecasts for
second quarter GDP growth range from minus 25 down to minus 40 percent, measured at an annual rate.
I agree that second quarter growth could be the largest quarterly decline on record.
[FIGURE 2] The decline in activity led to both headline and core inflation readings moving down in
March and April. I expect inflation to decline further this year because the sharp pullback in demand will
outweigh any upward pressure coming from limited supplies of certain goods and services.
In recent weeks, states have begun to relax some of their stay-at-home restrictions, and we are beginning
to see some positive signs in the data. Retail sales rebounded significantly in May, with sales up in all
major categories. In the Fourth District, which includes Ohio and parts of Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and
West Virginia, some activities have picked up faster than our business contacts had expected. Tourism
activity increased after Memorial Day and foot traffic at retail stores in the region moved up. Even so,
about 40 percent of our contacts do not expect activity to recover to pre-pandemic levels for at least a
year.
As more regions and sectors of the economy reopen, rates of growth are going to look very good, but we
are digging out from a very deep hole and it is more informative to think in terms of levels.
One of the most positive pieces of news we’ve received is the employment report for May. Instead of
rising as most economists expected, the unemployment rate fell. And instead of losing jobs, payrolls
increased by 2.5 million jobs. This is great news and points to some stabilization in the labor market after
two months of deep declines. I am hoping we will continue to see positive reports over coming months as
more of the economy opens up.
3
But it is also important to put May’s report into perspective.
[FIGURE 3] In April, the unemployment rate surged to 14.7 percent. In May, it fell to 13.3 percent, still
considerably above its previous peak in October 2009, in the aftermath of the Great Recession, and well
above the 3.5 percent it was as recently as February. In May, 21 million workers were unemployed
compared with 6 million in February. That is about one in 12 Americans aged 16 or older. This is worse
than in October 2009, when about one in 15 people were unemployed.
[FIGURE 4] The gain of 2.5 million jobs in May was a record monthly gain, but it is only about 11
percent of the job losses in March and April.
[FIGURE 5] In fact, the level of employment is near the lows we saw right after the Great Recession. So
that means the economy has lost almost all of the jobs it added over the entire expansion of 10-plus years.
Employment is 13 percent below February’s level.
The deterioration in the labor market is even sharper than these numbers indicate. Many people left the
work force at the beginning of the shutdown and they do not show up in the unemployment rate, and
many workers had their hours cut. Our survey of firms in the Fourth District indicates that while layoffs
began to slow in May, firms have recalled workers more slowly than they originally intended to.
Moreover, the improvements in May were not evenly shared. Indeed, half of the net private-sector job
losses since February have been in the leisure and hospitality and the retail trade sectors, the two sectors
ranked lowest in terms of average hourly earnings.
4
[FIGURE 6] The unemployment rates among blacks and Hispanics have been chronically above those of
whites and Asians. Over the long expansion, we had finally seen some progress being made on that front,
as the gap in unemployment rates narrowed. But the pandemic has increased the disparities. All groups
have experienced an increase in their unemployment rate since February, but the increase was less for
whites than for the other groups. And in May, the unemployment rate for both blacks and Asians
continued to edge up rather than fall. It is particularly distressing that much of the sacrifice over the
pandemic period is being borne by the most vulnerable in our economy: lower-income and minority
workers and communities, and the smaller of the small businesses.
[FIGURE 7] And it shines a bright light on long-standing economic inequality that needs to be addressed
if the economy is to perform up to its potential. Like the Council for Economic Education, I believe that
education is a path to better economic outcomes for individuals, households, and the country at large. Our
work force has become more educated over time. But the likelihood of completing a degree varies by
race. Graduation rates for whites, Hispanics, and Asians have risen over time, but those of blacks remain
well below those of these other groups and have shown no progress over time. Economic well-being rises
with education, so if more is not done to ensure that blacks who enter college have the support to
complete their degrees, economic inequality is likely to continue to rise.1
The Economic Outlook and Policy
Let me now turn to the outlook and policy. Macroeconomic forecasting is particularly challenging at this
time. With states relaxing stay-at-home restrictions, I expect economic activity to pick up in the second
half of the year. But there is considerable uncertainty about what the recovery will look like after the
1 See Loretta J. Mester, “Community Development and Human Capital,” remarks at the 2015 Policy Summit on
Housing, Human Capital, and Inequality, Federal Reserve Banks of Cleveland, Philadelphia, and Richmond,
Pittsburgh, PA, June 19, 2015 (https://www.clevelandfed.org/en/newsroom-and-events/speeches/sp-20150619-
community-development-and-human-capital.aspx). And see Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
“Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2019, Featuring Supplemental Data from April 2020,”
May 2020 (https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/2020-economic-well-being-of-us-households-in-2019-
preface.htm).
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economy reopens. The shape of the recovery will depend on the path of the virus and our ability to
handle its spread through testing, contact tracing, treatment, and risk-focused restrictions on activity. It
will also depend on the behavior of households and businesses and how comfortable they feel in re-
engaging in economic activity. The Cleveland Fed’s daily national survey of households suggests widely
varying views about the pandemic and how people plan to behave. About 60 percent of the respondents
think the pandemic will last a year or less, and on average, this group says they are likely to return to their
pre-pandemic usage of bars and restaurants, public spaces, public transportation, and crowded events.
The other 40 percent of the respondents expect the pandemic to last more than a year, and on average, this
group says they will not engage in these activities to the same extent they once did, even after the
pandemic has ended.2 It will be important to continue to monitor household and business attitudes in
assessing the outlook.
The other important factor that will determine the path of the recovery is how successful policy actions
are in ensuring that the temporary disruption in activity we have seen so far does not cause lasting damage
to the economy and that the recovery has enough support to be sustained.
Let me discuss some of these policy actions and then talk about the outlook. Both the federal government
and the Federal Reserve took significant actions quickly to provide households and businesses with relief
during the shutdown. Fiscal policymakers made grants to individuals, certain businesses hit hardest by
the pandemic, and states and municipalities. They have expanded unemployment benefits and have
funded the Paycheck Protection Program, which provides small businesses with loans that turn into grants
if they maintain their payrolls. As the magnitude of the need has come into better focus, the federal
government has increased its level of support. Although the amount of support has been sizable, so is the
2 The Cleveland Fed’s website provides updates of these survey results each Wednesday on the Consumers and
COVID-19 page, https://www.clevelandfed.org/our-research/indicators-and-data/consumers-and-covid-19.aspx.
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depth of the economic downturn. In my view, further direct fiscal support will be needed for states and
municipal governments and for households most affected by the pandemic.
The Federal Reserve is not legally able to make grants, but it has taken significant actions and has
committed to using its full set of tools to support the economy, guided by our congressional mandate to
promote maximum employment and price stability.
Early in the pandemic, the Fed began taking actions to help ensure that financial markets have enough
liquidity to continue to function well. Well-functioning financial markets are what allow credit to flow to
households and businesses and monetary policy to effectively transmit to broader financial conditions. So
when conditions became strained, the Fed began buying Treasury securities and agency mortgage-backed
securities and conducted operations in the repo market to ease those strains. At our meeting last week,
the FOMC said that over the coming months, the Fed would increase its holdings of Treasuries and
mortgage-backed securities at least at the current pace.
The Fed has also set up emergency lending facilities, with the backing of the U.S. Treasury, to serve as a
backstop to other key credit markets, including money market mutual funds and the commercial paper
market. The Fed is also ensuring that our central bank counterparties abroad have access to dollar
funding. Although volatility and risk spreads have not returned to pre-pandemic levels, there has been a
significant lessening of stress and an improvement in market functioning in many markets since these
actions have been taken.
7
Another set of our emergency lending facilities focuses more directly on supporting the flow of credit to
households, to businesses of all sizes, and to state and local governments.3 Included in this group are the
Municipal Liquidity Facility, which purchases short-term notes from states to help them manage cash-
flow pressures, and the Main Street Lending Program, which supports lending to small and medium-sized
businesses that were in sound financial condition before the onset of the pandemic. Based on
consultations with both lenders and potential borrowers, the Fed has adjusted the terms on some of these
programs to ensure that they will support the economy as effectively as they can while safeguarding
taxpayer funds. And earlier this week the Fed announced it was seeking public feedback on a proposed
expansion of the Main Street program to nonprofits, which provide vital services in the economy.
Because much of the flow of credit to households and businesses relies on the banking system, the Fed
has encouraged banks to use its discount window as a source of liquidity and to work with their borrowers
affected by the virus. The Fed has temporarily relaxed some of the regulatory requirements and
supervisory oversight so that banks have greater capacity to lend.
Last, but not least, in March the FOMC reduced its target range for the fed funds rate to 0 to 1/4 percent.
At our meeting last week, we maintained the funds rate at that level and reiterated that we expect to
maintain this target range until we are confident that the economy has weathered recent events and is on
track to achieve our maximum employment and price stability goals.
As more states relax restrictions on activity, the economy is moving from a shutdown phase, through a re-
opening phase, and into a recovery phase. As this happens, the focus of Fed policy will expand from
supporting market functioning and the flow of credit to supporting the recovery. I expect to see an
3 In addition to the Municipal Liquidity and the Main Street Lending Program, these facilities include the Paycheck
Protection Program Liquidity Facility, the Primary and Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facilities, and the Term
Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility. More information on the Federal Reserve’s actions in response to the effects
of the coronavirus on the economy is available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/covid-19.htm.
8
improvement in the second half of the year as the economy reopens. But after that, I believe it will take
quite some time for economic activity and job levels to approach more normal levels. The improvement
will vary across sectors, because even if people can resume some of their normal activities, they need to
feel some reassurance that it is safe to do so. In some industries, like travel and leisure and hospitality, it
will likely take quite a while longer for activity to pick up than in others. By the end of this year, I expect
that output will still be about 6 percent below its level at the end of last year, and the unemployment rate,
while down from its peak, will still be around 9 percent. I expect inflation to remain below our 2 percent
goal for some time to come.
In my view, very accommodative monetary policy will be needed to support the recovery and the return
to the FOMC’s goals of price stability and maximum employment over time. My economic forecast is
very similar to the median forecasts of the FOMC participants that were released last week, which show
an economic recovery starting in the second half of the year and continuing over the next couple of years.
Almost all of my FOMC colleagues agree with me that it will be appropriate for the fed funds rate to
remain at its current level through 2022, the end of our projection horizon, in support of the recovery.4
Over the next several weeks as more states reopen, we will get further readings on the condition of the
economy. The uncertainty surrounding the outlook is extremely high because we are in an unprecedented
situation. Outcomes depend not only on appropriate economic policy but also on public health
considerations. Epidemiologists tell us to expect periodic upswings in the number of cases until a vaccine
can be distributed. We are seeing that today in some locations. People often say that the virus determines
the timeline. I agree, but that does not mean we are helpless to affect the outcomes. Increased investment
would speed up the progress on testing, contact tracing, and treatments, and help ensure that the
healthcare system has adequate capacity. Better adherence to the guidelines on social distancing, mask
4 See Press Conference Projection Materials, June 10, 2020
(https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomcprojtabl20200610.htm).
9
wearing, and hygiene would help to control the virus’s spread. These actions would make it safer for
people to re-engage in activity and would allow for interventions to become more focused on helping
those at highest risk from the disease, thereby supporting the recovery. And May’s positive employment
and retail sales reports remind us of the resiliency of the U.S. economy. Of course, if the number of cases
of the virus is not well-controlled and the healthcare system gets overwhelmed, then the economic
outcomes I have discussed could turn out to be much more dire, with people and businesses restricting
their own activity even if states do not reinstate restrictions.
So at this juncture, I think it makes sense for monetary policymakers to continue to monitor the economy
as the country begins to re-engage in economic activity, to continue to support the flow of credit to
households and businesses and ensure the smooth functioning of financial markets, to remember that
there are several different scenarios that could play out, and to stand ready to use all of our tools to
mitigate lasting damage and to support the economy’s recovery back to maximum employment and price
stability.
Charts for “The Outlook for the Economy
and Federal Reserve Policy”
Loretta J. Mester*
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Economists on the Economy
Council for Economic Education
June 17, 2020
* The views expressed here are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.
1
Figure 1. The economic expansion ended in February
Growth of real GDP
Percent Change, SAAR
6.0
1
4.0 1
1
2.0
1
0.0
1
‐2.0
1
‐4.0 0
‐5%
0
‐6.0
0
‐8.0
0
‐10.0
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis via Haver Analytics
Quarterly data: Last obs. 2020Q1
2
Figure 2. Inflation has moved down
Percent
4.5
Headline PCE Year‐over‐year
4.0
Core PCE percentage change
3.5
Cleveland Fed Median PCE
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
‐0.5
‐1.0
‐1.5
2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis via Haver Analytics and
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
3
Monthly data: Last obs. April 2020
Figure 3. The unemployment rate is well over its
previous peak
Percent, SA
18
Unemployment rate
16
14
13.3%
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics via Haver Analytics
4 Monthly data: Last obs. May 2020
Figure 4. Only 11% of job losses in March and April
were regained in May
+2.5 mill
Thousands of jobs
600
400
200
0
‐200
Monthly change in payroll jobs
‐400
‐600
‐800
‐1000
‐1200
‐1400
‐1600
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
‐20.7 mill
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics via Haver Analytics
Quarterly data: Last obs. May 2020
Figure 5. The economy has shed almost all of the jobs
it added over the past expansion
Millions of Jobs, SA
155
Nonfarm payroll employment
150
145
140
135
133 mill
130
125
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics via Haver Analytics
6 Monthly data: Last obs. May 2020
Figure 6. May’s decline in the unemployment rate was
not shared by blacks or Asians
Percent, SA
Unemployment rate by race and ethnicity
20
Asian
18
17.6
Black or African American
16.8
16 Hispanic or Latino
15.0
White
14
12.4
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics via Haver Analytics
7 Monthly data: Last obs. May 2020
Figure 7. Graduation rates for blacks are lower than for
other groups and have not improved over time
Graduation rates for BAs six years from start
Percent
80
Asian
Black or African American
70
Hispanic or Latino
White
60
50
40
30
20
10
1996 2012 1996 2012 1996 2012
Starting dates Starting dates Starting dates
Nonprofit For‐profit
Public
institutions institutions
institutions
Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics,
Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), Table 326.10
Charts for “The Outlook for the Economy
and Federal Reserve Policy”
Loretta J. Mester*
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Economists on the Economy
Council for Economic Education
June 17, 2020
* The views expressed here are my own and not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve System or my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee.
9
Cite this document
APA
Loretta J. Mester (2020, June 16). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200617_loretta_j_mester
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20200617_loretta_j_mester,
author = {Loretta J. Mester},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2020},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200617_loretta_j_mester},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}