One year in, the American Rescue Plan has fueled a fast recovery: Policymakers should use remaining ARPA funds in 2022 to make transformative investments that will build a more equitable economy

One year in, the American Rescue Plan has fueled a fast recovery: Policymakers should use remaining ARPA funds in 2022 to make transformative investments that will build a more equitable economy

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March 11 marks the one-year anniversary of the signing of the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). This $1.9 trillion dollar relief package was both an emergency measure to help the nation through the worst pandemic in a century and an ambitious catalyst to jumpstart efforts to redress the staggering economic inequalities in our economy. In its first year, ARPA helped the economy recover at a tremendous pace, and aided working families through difficult times. In the year to come, state and local policymakers will have critical opportunities to use their substantial remaining ARPA funds to rebuild the public sector, support low-wage workers, and target systemic inequities.

ARPA supported a year of strong growth

A full labor market recovery took more than a decade after the Great Recession began in late 2007. Federal stimulus, needed to restart the economy in times of recession, was inadequate to circumstances throughout the 2010s. The slow recovery of the economy during the Great Recession also gave ammunition to political forces that supported austerity, the dismantling of labor unions, and the continued weakening of the social safety net.

With inadequate federal fiscal aid, many states faced large budget shortfalls in the wake of the Great Recession, and many state and local lawmakers responded by dramatically slashing budgets and cutting jobs. These cuts to state and local government had a disproportionate impact on women and Black and Hispanic workers, who are more likely to be employed in the public sector. This austerity was not only unnecessary, it also directly contributed to the slow pace of the economic recovery.

This long period of anemic growth also meant a lost decade of potential wage growth for low-income and middle-income workers, and racial employment and wage gaps continued to expand.

Along with COVID-related legislation like the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act passed in 2020, ARPA has gone a long way to making sure the mistakes of the Great Recession were not repeated. Tens of millions were kept out of poverty because of social insurance programs from CARES, ARPA, and other relief legislation. Despite a catastrophic cratering of the economy in March 2020—with more than 20 million jobs lost—the country is on track to return to pre-COVID levels of employment before the end of 2022.

Federal fiscal relief at the scale of the problem led to a faster recovery from the pandemic recession: Private-sector employment change since business cycle peak, December 2007 and February 2020

months since peak 2007 2020
0 100 100
1 99.99913805 98.88601736
2 99.90604744 83.78707811
3 99.84140119 86.1978785
4 99.62849952 89.67714561
5 99.44749 90.67463838
6 99.27079024 91.61041466
7 99.05788857 92.35024108
8 98.8191284 92.96663452
9 98.44848986 93.27984571
10 98.02354848 93.19652845
11 97.38742932 93.52285439
12 96.78234037 94.05747348
13 96.08674666 94.55891996
14 95.4489036 94.72246866
15 94.77313474 95.01639344
16 94.07323128 95.40829315
17 93.83016136 95.90048216
18 93.46297062 96.28389585
19 93.21731485 96.59942141
20 93.04578679 97.13481196
21 92.91218453 97.61851495
22 92.67773411 98.05130183
23 92.68031996 98.39691418
24 92.49241484 98.90144648
25 92.48638119
26 92.42001103
27 92.53982209
28 92.69497311
29 92.79237347
30 92.89322162
31 92.96821128
32 93.09233209
33 93.1854227
34 93.37332782
35 93.48969108
36 93.56985243
37 93.59312509
38 93.81292236
39 94.03530548
40 94.3128534
41 94.44731761
42 94.62056958
43 94.77141084
44 94.90759895
45 95.13773962
46 95.30064819
47 95.43769825
48 95.62646532
49 95.93849124
50 96.16346021
51 96.37377603
52 96.45479934
53 96.55823335
54 96.60477865
55 96.75044821
56 96.89611778
57 97.04954489
58 97.20555785
59 97.35726107
60 97.55981934
61 97.7399669
62 97.96924562
63 98.09853813
64 98.26403255
65 98.45969521
66 98.63639498
67 98.75448214
68 98.94928286
69 99.10701972
70 99.30526824
71 99.52161771
72 99.60091711
73 99.75693008
74 99.89053234
75 100.1025721
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