Powell warns that long downturn would mean severe damage
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell says the U.S. economy faces a deep downturn with “significant uncertainty” about the timing and strength of a recovery. He warns that the longer the recession lasts, the worse the damage that will be inflicted on the job market and businesses.
Powell stresses in prepared testimony to Congress that the Fed is committed to using all its financial tools to cushion the economic damage from the coronavirus. But he says that until the public is confident the disease has been contained, “a full recovery is unlikely.”
The chairman warns that a prolonged downturn could inflict severe harm, especially to low-income workers who have been hit hardest. Powell is delivering the first of two days of semi-annual congressional testimony, first on Tuesday to the Senate Banking Committee and then on Wednesday to the House Financial Services Committee.
“The longer the downturn lasts, the greater the potential for longer-term damage from permanent job loss and business closures,” Powell says in his Senate testimony. “Long periods of unemployment can erode workers’ skills and hurt their job prospects.”