Congress Nears U.S. Spending Deal with Federal Reserve

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Congressional leaders on Wednesday said they were nearing a long-awaited agreement on a stimulus package for the U.S. economy, while the Federal Reserve is set to provide updated forecasts that could show renewed optimism for the months ahead.

A federal relief package to aid struggling business and jobless workers is seen as essential in getting the world's largest economy back on its feet even as vaccines against Covid-19 are rolled out, and would also ease the pressure on the central bank, which has limited tools to help the economy.

"We made major headway toward hammering out a targeted pandemic relief package that would be able to pass both chambers with bipartisan majorities," Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said early Wednesday.

"We committed to continuing these urgent discussions until we have an agreement, and we agreed that we will not leave town until we've made law."

The progress comes as government data shows retail sales dropping sharply in November, which together with slowing employment gains, a resurgent wave of coronavirus infections and a pandemic death toll north of 300,000 has increased fears of another economic downturn.

Despite months of negotiations, lawmakers in Washington have failed to break an impasse over a new package to follow the $2.2 trillion CARES act, which provided aid to businesses and expanded benefits to workers hurt by the pandemic that would not normally be eligible for regular jobless payments.

Without congressional action, millions of people could lose those benefits after Christmas.

The signs of compromise came after a bipartisan group of legislators floated an option with a smaller price tag but excluding thorny provisions like aid for state and local governments and liability protection for businesses from Covid-related lawsuits.

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi met with McConnell and other leaders late Tuesday, and legislators could attach their relief bill to a spending plan that keeps the government operating beyond the end of its current funding expiring at midnight Friday.

"We are close to an agreement. It's not a done deal yet, but we are very close," top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said.

- The Fed's outlook -

The central bank's Federal Open Markets Committee (FOMC) is set to conclude its two-day meeting and announce its policy decision Wednesday at 1900 GMT, after which Fed Chair Jerome Powell will hold a press conference.

With interest rates firmly at zero, attention will be focused on the U.S. economic outlook provided in the quarterly forecasts of the 17 FOMC members.

The rollout of the first Covid-19 vaccine and approval of a second expected soon has fueled optimism business in the United States can begin to return to normal early next year, which could mean a more optimistic growth outlook.

But as U.S. coronavirus infections continue to spike nationwide, more regions may experience business shutdowns, complicating the forecasts.

Government data show consumers became more reluctant to venture out last month, reflected in the 1.1 percent drop in retail sales, with the biggest decreases seen in restaurants and department stores that rely on in-person shoppers.