Fed Chair Powell says the CARES Act and other rescue efforts saved the economy from Armageddon
Fed holds rates steady
The Federal Reserve expects to hold rates new zero through 2023. FOX Business’ Edward Lawrence with more.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Tuesday credited economic packages passed by the Trump and Biden administrations with saving the economy from the most damaging long-term effects of the coronavirus pandemic which hit the U.S. one year ago.
Powell said the economic recovery has been faster than anticipated, which can be attributed in part to the “strength of the fiscal response.”
“Fiscal policy, overall, will have really helped us to avoid much of the scarring that we were very, very concerned about at the beginning,” Powell said during a press conference following a two-day FOMC policy meeting in which policymakers pledged to keep interest rates low until 2023.
“I think that’s just the size and the speed with which Congress has delivered, you know, with the CARES Act and since then, is going to wind up very much accelerating the return to full employment, it’s going to make a huge difference in people’s lives and it has already.”
The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act were among the rescue efforts spearheaded by former U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Economic Advisor Larry Kudlow, who is now a FOX Business host, working with the Fed to ensure the financial system and markets remained stable.