Biden’s Help Package Passed the Senate and The Vaccines Are Helping to Reopen The Economy

 
One big thing: Vaccine dreams juice jobs
Data: FRED; Chart: Axios Visuals

Good news for your start of the week: the economy added a whopping 379,000 jobs in February — far outpacing expectations. 

Why it matters: Virus cases eased in recent weeks and states lifted restrictions, helping fuel a hiring surge. It's proof of how much control the pandemic has over the job market.

The clearest signal: The bounce-back was largely driven by hiring in the leisure and hospitality sectors, which came even in the dead of winter. 

  • This sector is a key example of one that can't recover until people feel safe eating and drinking out.

Here's the bad news: Job growth peaked with 152.5 million payrolls before the pandemic hit the labor market.

  • Even with today's report — the best jobs growth since October — we're still more than 9 million jobs below that level one year later.
  • And despite the big gains in leisure and hospitality, the sector still has 20% fewer jobs.
  • The number of workers who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more — 4.1 million — barely budged.

Between the lines: President Biden was handed a labor market hobbled by a pandemic. Its recovery hinges on keeping COVID cases low, succeeding with mass vaccination, and getting hard-hit businesses to return to hiring. 

  • "February was OK but at that pace, [it] would take 4 1/2 years to recover. We need more like 1m jobs a month," Jason Furman, a former economic adviser in the Obama administration, tweeted.
  • The jobs figures in January and February also came in the wake of improving case numbers and a $900 billion relief bill passed in December, Furman noted. The Senate is currently debating Biden's $1.9 trillion rescue package.

The bottom line: Economists are penciling in a "Roaring 20s"-like recovery — with eye-popping growth figures to boot! — as vaccines continue to roll out and the economy opens up.

A pessimistic parting shot, courtesy of the Fed chair: "We have significant ground to cover," Jerome Powell said yesterday, cautioning that a complete job market healing likely won't come this year.

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