The Wall Street Journal - 28.03.2020 - 29.03.2020

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A6| Saturday/Sunday, March 28 - 29, 2020 *** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC


For all the talk of polarization, the
political stars are better aligned now for
crisis response. In 2008, the country was
led by a weak, lame duck president, George
W. Bush. President Obama took over in
2009, facing staunch GOP opposition to his
stimulus strategy. Those factors delayed
and limited legislation. President Trump
enjoys strong support from his party, and
his re-election rests on containing the
economic fallout. Democrats tend to be
more supportive of big spending programs,
regardless of who controls the White House.
The coronavirus crisis is still unfolding,
and there are mounting signs the economic
destruction could be far worse. In the
depths of the last recession, the number of
weekly initial claims filed for unemploy-
ment insurance never came close to a
million. A record 3.28 million Americans
filed for jobless benefits for the week ended
March 21—nearly five times the previous
record high set during the early 1980s
recession.

The decline also appears to be much
deeper. At the low point of the great
recession, gross domestic product
contracted by an annualized 8%. Now, the
median “pessimistic forecast” for a group
of economists surveyed last week by The
Wall Street Journal was a 10% drop for the
quarter ending June 30. Morgan Stanley
sees a more severe decline, saying Sunday
that GDP could fall 30.1% for that period.

Another difference: politicians worry
much less about the budget deficit. As
Congress weighed a big stimulus bill in
early 2009, lawmakers labored to keep
the price below $1 trillion—a number
they feared would look excessive. The
$787 billion measure was considered by
many economists to be too tepid for the
scale of the crisis. In the coronavirus
debate, the deficit gets scant mention.

By Jacob M. Schlesinger
and Hanna Sender

There are similarities
between the financial crisis
of 2008 and the coronavirus
pandemic of 2020. A sudden,
jarring breakdown in the
economy and markets,
followed by a massive
response from policy makers
to try to prevent a 21st-

century Great Depression.
One big difference: speed.
Washington has this time
done in weeks what took a
year and a half back then.
The first signs of the
financial crisis emerged in
August 2007, when securities
backed by subprime
mortgages plunged. Congress
and the White House
ultimately allocated about

$2 trillion to subdue the
disaster. The final big piece
wasn’t enacted until Febru-
ary 2009.
This year, Congress has in
March alone passed three
laws throwing about the
same amount of money at the
problem, barely two months
after the first officially
reported coronavirus death
in China.

Back then, the Federal Reserve was first to act, and for months took the lead as politicians
hesitated to deal with the unpopular cause of aiding the banks. In retrospect, the Fed was also
behind the curve, because it had to improvise measures. This time, the central bank has been
able to quickly pull off the shelf a tested crisis tool kit.

SinceChinareportsfirstdeath
fromcoronavirus(Jan.11,2020)

Sinceearlysignsofthe
financialcrisis*(Aug.7,2007)

$2.

0

0.

0.

0.

1.

1.

1.

1.

2.

trillion

DAYSSINCETHECRISISBEGAN

0 100 200 300 400 500days

Eightyweeksafterthecrisis
began,PresidentBarackObama
signsintolawthe$787billion
AmericanRecoveryand
ReinvestmentAct.

Elevenweeksaftercoronavirus
outbreak,Congresspasses
$2trillionCoronavirusAid,Relief,
andEconomicSecurityAct.

$700billion
TroubledAsset
ReliefProgram

$8billionpreparedness
billand$100billion
stimulusbill

$152billionstimulusbill

$300billion
mortgage-
guaranteebill

DAYSSINCETHECRISISBEGAN

0 100 200 300 400 500days

5.

0

0.

1.

1.

2.

2.

3.

3.

4.

4.

5.

% FederalFundsTargetRate

Oct
Loanstomoney-
marketmutualfunds
newcommercialpaper
lendingfacility

Dec
Newshort-termfundingloanprogram

TotalfundsauthorizedbyCongress


Onereasonforthespeedbyauthoritiesisthatmarkets
andtheeconomyhavecrumbledmuchfasterthistime.

March-4
Cutsratesrevives
financialcrisismeasures

SinceChinareportsfirstdeath
fromcoronavirus(Jan.11,2020)

Sinceearlysignsofthe
financialcrisis(Aug.7,2007)

March
CoversBearStearnslossesloansto
investmentbanksandsecuritiesdealers

Sept
ConvertsMorganStanley
GoldmanSachstobanksaidtoAIG

Nov
Pumps
$8billion
intocredit
markets

Sources:
Commerce
Department
(GDP); Wall
Street Journal
survey of 34
economists March
18-19 (forecasts);
Congressional
Budget Office
(deficit); the
firms (forecasts)















0

2

4%

2007 ’09 ’11 ’13 ’15 ’17 ’

Optimistic
Baseline

Pessimistic

RealGDP,annualizedgrowthrate Totalfederalgovernmentdeficit

J.P.Morgan

Moody’s
Analytics

$2.

0

0.

1.

$1.

2.

t̀rillion

2007 ’09 ’11 ’13 ’15 ’17 ’19 ’

Decision
Economics
Companyestimates
madeinmid-March

Congressional
BudgetOffice
forecastmade
onMarch

TheWallStreet
Journallastweek
asked34leading
economistsfor
theirforecasts

ECONOMISTS’
MEDIANFORECASTS

Quarterly

Note: Target rate is reported as a range from Dec. 16, 2008.
Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve

InitialJoblessClaims

Note: Seasonally adjusted
Source: Department of Labor

WEEKSSINCETHECRISISBEGAN

0

0.

1.

1.

2.

2.

3.0million

0 1020304050607080





SinceChinareportsfirstdeath
fromcoronavirus(Jan.11,2020)

Sinceearlysigns
ofthefinancialcrisis
(Aug.7,2007)

March15-

*BNP Paribas becomes first major financial
institution to report major mortgage-related
distress by freezing subprime mortgage funds.
Sources: Congressional Budget Office; White House

at once,” he Mr. Schumer said.
At about 9:23 p.m., Mr.
McConnell issued a statement
saying he had asked GOP com-
mittee chairmen to write final
legislative text reflecting the
compromises they had reached
with Democrats, and to deliver
it later that evening. But a 10
p.m. statement from Mr.
Schumer’s office warned that
Democrats weren’t on board.
Republicans blamed Mrs.
Pelosi, whom Mr. Schumer had
been keeping apprised of the
talks. Democrats pointed the
finger at Mr. McConnell for
producing new legislative text
prematurely.
Tensions soared after news
at a closed-door GOP lunch on
Sunday that Sen. Rand Paul (R.,
Ky.) had become the first sena-
tor to test positive for Covid-19.
Within hours, two more Repub-
licans, Sens. Mike Lee and Mitt
Romney of Utah, entered quar-
antine because of close contact
with Mr. Paul. Two other Repub-
licans were already quarantined.
Democrats agreed at their
own lunch to block the 3 p.m.
procedural vote. Mr. Schumer
informed Mr. McConnell, but the
GOP leader ultimately pressed
ahead, knowing it would fail.
Privately, Mr. McConnell
wasn’t worried talks would fall
apart. He didn’t think there was
time for the usual legislative
gamesmanship. Not now that
Covid-19 had arrived in the Sen-
ate. “Every day that goes by, anx-
iety rises, jobs are lost,” he said.
On Monday, Democrats
blocked another procedural
motion. Anger boiled over on
the Senate floor. When Sen. Su-
san Collins (R., Maine) asked to
speak and Mr. Schumer ob-
jected, Ms. Collins marched
over and pointed her finger at
Mr. Schumer’s face. “This is ap-
palling!” she exclaimed.
Behind the scenes, Mr.
Schumer and Mr. Mnuchin were
making progress. Around 7
p.m., encouraged, Mr. Schumer
decided they were close enough
to reach an agreement.
He threw a log on the fire in
his Capitol office fireplace,
knowing that he likely would be
there for hours.
The two Senate leaders met
on the Senate floor about 1:
a.m. on Wednesday. There were
still some i’s to dot and t’s to
cross, Mr. Schumer said, and
they had to decide if they would
say there was a deal, or an-
nounce an agreement in princi-
ple. “We decided to say we had a
deal,” he said, “to keep the mo-
mentum going and give some re-
lief to the markets.”
For Mr. McConnell, the mo-
ment wasn’t celebratory. “I
think relief is a better word to
use,” he said. “We both smiled
and went to bed.”

would needlessly stall aid to
Americans.
To prevent a delay, House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.)
worked with House Minority
Leader Kevin McCarthy (R., Ca-
lif.) and House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer (D., Md.,) to as-
semble a flotilla of rank-and-file
legislators to stop Mr. Massie.
Many Democrats and Republi-
cans boarded red-eye flights
back to Washington or took
long road trips to reach the
quorum—216—needed to out-
flank Mr. Massie. His maneuver
would have succeeded only if
the House lacked a quorum or
if he had support from one-fifth
of the lawmakers to insist on a
roll call. Neither was the case.
“We have our differences,
but we also know what is im-
portant to us,” Mrs. Pelosi said
when she joined Mr. McCarthy
at a news conference after the
vote. “America’s families are
important to us.”
The vote came at a tense
time. The Capitol is awash in
anxiety over the novel coronavi-
rus, and two additional mem-
bers of the House—Reps. Mike
Kelly (R., Pa.) and Joe Cunning-
ham (D., S.C.) announced Friday
they tested positive for the ill-
ness. In all, at least five lawmak-
ers have contracted Covid-19,
including one, Rep. Ben McAd-
ams (D., Utah), who is on oxy-
gen support in the hospital.
In the most dramatic moment
of the floor debate, Rep. Haley
Stevens (D., Mich.) donned pink
latex gloves as she delivered an
impassioned plea to pass the
bill, talking beyond her minute
of allotted time and shouting
when her own leader, Mr. Hoyer,
urged her to suspend so he
could extend her more time,
while some Republicans jeered.
Lawmakers are already dis-
cussing what could be needed in
a subsequent economic-relief
package—which would be the
fourth to address the health cri-
sis. Mrs. Pelosi has said she
wants to see more worker-safety
protections, along with access to
free health care for those who
become sick from the virus.
Just five days earlier, the
third relief package had hit a
snag, and such a quick turn-
around on the legislation
seemed to be out of reach, ac-
cording to interviews with Sen-
ate leaders in both parties,
other lawmakers, senior House
Democratic and GOP aides, and
administration officials familiar
with the negotiations.
In a meeting March 22
among the top four congressio-
nal leaders in Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell’s of-
fice, Mrs. Pelosi and the Sen-
ate’s top Democrat, Chuck
Schumer, ticked off objections
to the measure as it stood. In
particular, they raised the issue
of there not being enough over-
sight at the Treasury Depart-
ment over a $500 billion corpo-
rate assistance program for
distressed industries, and Trea-
sury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
indicated he was amenable to
working that out.
Mr. McConnell, who had re-
leased his second draft of the
bill that morning, was taken
aback. To him, this wasn’t time
to open discussions, it was time
to close them.
“It was rather heated,” re-
called Mr. Schumer later in an
interview, “and I said to Mitch,
‘You said it’s bipartisan. You
and I know it’s not biparti-
san.’ ” The New York senator
believed Republicans were try-
ing to jam Democrats by forc-
ing them to accept the GOP-

Continued from Page One

President


Signs Big


Stimulus


penned draft.
“We weren’t throwing stuff,”
Mr. McConnell, of Kentucky,
said in an interview. “It was
cordial. But aggressive.”
Mrs. Pelosi started talking
about her House version of the
bill and what she planned to in-
clude: expanded unemployment
insurance, aid to states and
help for cash-strapped em-
ployer pension plans.
It was, in part, a negotiating
tactic. Her aim was to put pres-
sure on Republicans to meet
Democrats’ demands for changes
to the Senate legislation. She
also saw it as a back-up bill
should Senate negotiations falter.
As the House speaker
walked out of the meeting, re-
porters overheard her give a
grim update to a staffer: “We
are so far apart.”
Mrs. Pelosi, who shepherded
two earlier emergency coronavi-
rus bills through Congress with
Mr. Mnuchin, had wanted a
“four-points” leadership meeting
earlier on. She had called Mr.
McConnell on Tuesday, March 17,
and asked for one, arguing that
reaching agreement between the
two Democrats, Mr. McConnell
and Mr. McCarthy of California

would be the most efficient ap-
proach. Mr. McConnell said no.
Republican frustration with
a previous piece of coronavirus-
relief legislation, which Mr.
McConnell told members to
“gag and vote for it anyway,”
also motivated the Senate GOP
to take a more active role in
the new round of talks.
So Mr. McConnell assigned a
handful of GOP working groups
to start putting together a bill.
The instruction was to find
proposals that Republicans
knew their colleagues wouldn’t
oppose reflexively on ideologi-
cal grounds.
On Thursday, March 19, Mr.
McConnell released his first
draft. It didn’t include ex-
panded unemployment bene-
fits, as Democrats had wanted.
It also didn’t include direct aid
to states.
Senators met on Capitol Hill
on Friday, March 20, and broke
into working groups. According
to Mr. Schumer, the groups
continued collaborating until
about 7 p.m. last Saturday.
That’s when Republicans
stopped responding to their
Democratic counterparts, he
said. “All the groups shut down

Lawmakers are
already discussing a
subsequent virus-
relief package.

The USNS Mercy Navy hospital ship entered the Port of Los Angeles Friday to help with patients.

MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS

How Fast the Economy Crashed—


And Washington Responded


The Fed and Congress sped up the response to the coronavirus


pandemic using strategies tested a decade ago in the financial crisis


Lawmakers Learn
Social Distancing

Friday’s House vote on the
economic-relief package took
place against an unusual back-
drop, with lawmakers spread
throughout the chamber and
advised to use hand sanitizer,
to avoid elevators and to keep
proper social distance.
“People who can see the
chamber now will see that we
are keeping a distance from
one another, not out of hostil-
ity but out of love for one an-
other and that we may keep
one another healthy and safe,”
said House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer (D., Md.) on Fri-
day.
House members were
called to the vote because Rep.
Thomas Massie (R., Ky.) had
said he would try to force a
formal roll-call vote on the re-
lief package, which drew a rare
rebuke from President Trump
toward a fellow Republican.
“Looks like a third rate

Grandstander named
@RepThomasMassie. wants to
vote against the new Save Our
Workers Bill,” Mr. Trump wrote
on Twitter earlier Friday.
Mr. Massie was unbowed.
“I swore an oath to uphold
the constitution, and I take
that oath seriously,” the law-
maker tweeted. “Is it too much
to ask that the House do its
job, just like the Senate did?”
The uncertainty prompted
many lawmakers to begin driv-
ing and flying to Washington
well before dawn.
Republican Rep. Tom Reed
left his home in Corning, N.Y.,
at 3 a.m. to make it to the
Capitol by the time debate
started. Rep. Joe Kennedy (D.,
Mass.) said he got in his car at
4 a.m. to drive to Washington.
“Once we vote, I’m driving right
back,” he tweeted.
Other lawmakers on flights
back to the nation’s capital
posted photos on social media,
including one of a group of
lawmakers sitting on a nearly
empty plane, in rows 6 feet
apart.
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