US economy unlikely to recover as rapidly as it collapsed

FILE - In this March 10, 2020 file photo, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin listens as President Donald Trump talks to reporters about coronavirus after meeting with Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill in Washington. Trump has been telling voters that the U.S. economy will leap back to life “like a rocket,” stronger than ever after its bout with the coronavirus. But there is a reason economics is called the “dismal science.” There are emerging signs that any recovery will fail to match the speed and severity of the economic collapse that occurred in just a few weeks. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Within three weeks a total of 16.8 million people have filed for unemployment aid.

FILE - In this March 21, 2020, file photo, a man walks along a usually busy Fremont Street after casinos were ordered to shut down due to the coronavirus outbreak in Las Vegas. Nearly 245,000 people have filed for unemployment in Nevada since casinos and other businesses closed in mid-March to keep people from congregating and spreading the new coronavirus, according to U.S, Department of Labor figures posted Thursday, April 9. (AP Photo/John Locher, File)

BALTIMORE — President Donald Trump has been telling voters that the U.S. economy will leap back to life “like a rocket,” stronger than ever after its bout with the coronavirus.