KEY POINTS
  • Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell says if there isn't another shutdown, the U.S. economy will recover most of the lost growth in the second quarter.
  • The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated in a report that the partial government closure cost the economy $11 billion, with $3 billion permanently lost.
  • "If there were going to be a permanent, or a lasting effect let's say, it would be from a longer shutdown or perhaps a second shutdown," Powell later added.
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday afternoon that the American economy will recover most of the economic output lost during the federal government's partial shutdown.

"I think important – probably less important now – has been the shutdown, which will leave some sort of imprint on first-quarter GDP," Powell said during a news conference. "We don't know the ultimate resolution of it. If that's all there is and the shutdown is gone and there isn't another shutdown, we'll get most of [the lost growth] back in the second quarter."