Fed Minutes: Upbeat Economic Forecast Based On Stimulus Likely To Not Happen

 | Oct 08, 2020 09:42AM ET

When they made their upbeat economic forecasts last month, Federal Reserve policymakers said they presumed there would be additional fiscal stimulus from Congress—a condition that appears less likely to be met after President Donald Trump broke off talks to find a compromise on a broad stimulus package.

The minutes of the Sept. 15-16 Federal Open Market Committee meeting, published Wednesday said:

“Many participants noted that their economic outlook assumed additional fiscal support and that if future fiscal support was significantly smaller or arrived significantly later than they expected, the pace of the recovery could be slower than anticipated.”

The September projections of the FOMC members had heartened investors. They softened their estimate of this year’s decline in GDP to 3.7% from a 6.5% drop at the June meeting. They also lowered their forecast for unemployment to 7.6% for 2020 from 9.3% at the earlier meeting.

Both of those projections are now in doubt after the ongoing stalemate in talks prompted the president to call a halt to the effort. Democrats led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi were holding out for $2.2 trillion in further aid, which included federal funds for state and local governments. Republicans, represented by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, balked at the aid for governments and set a ceiling of $1.6 trillion for the package.

h2 Piecemeal Spending Measures; Outcome-Oriented Guidance/h2

Subsequently, the administration has held out the prospect of piecemeal measures, one-off deals for aid to airlines or another round of checks for individuals, but there seems to be little chance even for those prior to the election.

The five members of the Federal Reserve Board and the 12 regional bank presidents who make up the committee also discussed what kind of forward guidance they should give for the flexible policy on inflation announced in August, which rules out preemptive rate hikes to head off inflation.

Most participants favored an outcome-oriented guidance on when rates might be increased.