Fed President Jerome Powell April 29, 2020. - Jacquelyn Martin / AP / SIPA

It therefore took a global pandemic to end ten years of American growth. The GDP of the world's largest economy fell 4.8% in the first quarter, the victim of containment measures put in place to stem the progression of the coronavirus. And even if it promised to do everything it can, the Fed expects a historic plunge in the months to come.

Restaurants, bars, shops, schools, have gradually closed. In five weeks, more than 26 million people have registered for unemployment, unprecedented, "much faster for minorities" and low-income households, lamented the head of the federal reserve, Jerome Powell. And, while only the end of the quarter was affected by these measures, the fall in GDP will be much more spectacular in the second quarter, which will also mark the official entry of the United States into recession, according to a classic definition of this decline in national wealth.

A reduction of 30 to 40% envisaged

The US economy will "likely drop at an unprecedented rate in the second quarter," said Powell. He was careful not to give a quantified forecast, given the uncertainties as to the extent and duration of the slowdown, which "will largely depend on the speed with which the virus will be brought under control," he said during the meeting. 'a press conference. Analysts' projections point to a fall of around 30 to 40%.

To ensure a "as robust as possible" recovery of the economy, the American Central Bank has not skimped for two months. It has unsheathed all of its classic crisis-time tools, and created others, in order to reassure the markets and give a breath of fresh air to businesses and households. And she promised Wednesday to continue using them "aggressively", saying that the economy "will probably need more support" than the measures already taken, which are yet unprecedented. The Fed's monetary committee has also kept key rates in the 0-0.25% range, and will leave them there until it is satisfied that the economy "survived" this crisis.

The worst decline since the Second World War

Public money will have to be drawn heavily, according to Jerome Powell. "It is time to use the great budgetary power of the United States to support the economy and try to get through (this crisis) with the least possible damage to the long-term production capacities of the economy", he advanced. Finished the budgetary orthodoxy, the reflection on the deficit will come after.

The economy should recover timidly from the summer. But the fall in the second quarter will be such that the recovery in the third quarter is unlikely to be sufficient to return to pre-crisis levels.

The recession in the United States could be three times stronger than during the financial crisis, "and the strongest economic contraction since the Second World War", according to analysts at Oxford Economics. For some sectors particularly affected by the paralysis of the economy, like air transport, the return to the level of 2019 could take several years. The International Monetary Fund thus expects a contraction in US GDP of 5.9% for the year 2020.

  • Growth
  • Economy
  • Coronavirus
  • Recession