US Democrats propose $3 trillion stimulus

US House Democrats have proposed another $3 trillion Covid-19 fiscal stimulus package, which if passed would stand as the largest relief package in history - dwarfing the $2 trillion stimulus measure enacted in March. While the legislation is expected to be voted on this week, Republicans have already dismissed the package, stating that another round of emergency funding is not yet needed.

The proposal for further stimulus came as the US Treasury announced that it would borrow $3 trillion this quarter alone to fund its existing stimulus packages, taking total government debt above $25 trillion. Additional borrowing is expected to push the US fiscal deficit to 19 per cent of GDP, nearly double the 10 per cent it hit during the peak of the global financial crisis ten years ago.

However, Powell said: “Additional fiscal support could be costly, but worth it, if it helps avoid long-term economic damage and leaves us with a stronger recovery." The severe decline in economic activity and in employment had already erased all the job gains of the past decade with the unemployment rate spiking to 14.7 per cent as more than 20 million jobs were lost in April. The unemployment rate peaked during the Great Depression at an average of 24.9 per cent in 1933.

UK contracting at the fastest pace since the financial crisis

Meanwhile, the UK economy shrank by 2 per cent in the first three months of 2020, with GDP declining by 5.8 per cent in March alone. With the lockdown only imposed in the final week of March, the economy is expected to deteriorate at a much faster pace in the second quarter. The realities of a prolonged recession in the UK are now settling in and the government faces a monumental task as it begins to take “baby steps” towards easing the lockdown and helping the country recover.  

FLI weakens further

With parts of the global economy in severe recession, Fidelity’s leading indicator (FLI) plunged further into the bottom-left quadrant of growth below-trend and decelerating. The three-month growth rate is now below its nadir during the global financial crisis. Weakness was seen across the board, with all underlying sectors deeply entrenched in the bottom-left quadrant. Every single component showed negative growth, reflecting a global economy where services activity has been almost entirely shut down, and manufacturing largely disrupted. 

Raji Menon

Raji Menon

Investment Writer