What about super-loose monetary policy guaranteed for another two years? Where does that fall in this list?
I think you've basically got it right, except we somehow need to acknowledge that the economy that's being very kind to people with investible assets is also causing a lot of damage to households who rent and depend on service/entertainment sector for employment.
We need to do more than acknowledge it, we need to adjust our tax and wage laws to reflect it.
1. Let's stop taxing long-term capital gains at a lower rate than employment income.
There's no good reason why the person who flips a burger (generally someone with low income and a low net worth) should be subsidizing people who flip stocks, art, or real estate and who typically enjoy a higher income, a higher net worth, or both. The essence of a capitalist society is that the interests of the provider of capital are acknowledged and protected, however this shouldn't come at the interests of the people who provide the labor, innovation, small business resources, infrastructure, government, etc. Right now the economies of many nations, and the USA in particular, disproportionately favor the interests of capital providers over those of other citizens. That's unbalanced. I'm not advocating for state ownership of the means of production (I was in the Soviet Union during the last part of the Gorbachev administration and saw the endgame in action). Right now, in the USA at least, subsidies flow uphill a lot because of the tax structure.
2. Let's stop fellating large and institutional investors at the expense of everyone else.
Practices such as short selling and derivatives trading have led to the most disgusting market manipulations ever, and invariably the biggest offenders get bailed out by the federal government when their guesses go wrong. Meanwhile, the hedge fund managers and executives who make the abuses possible generally suffer no more than a slap on the wrist or a few weeks in Club Fed.
Let's remove the means by which big institutional investors intentionally bubble parts of the market. That means turning the stock market back into a means to buy, sell, and trade portions of various companies, instead of a glorified casino where the odds invariably favor the house.
If we really wanted to bring accountability to the system, when a company has something go badly wrong the shareholders of the company should be personally liable.
3. Let's require some accountability in the lending industry.
A lot of the biggest banks are coincidentally (?) heavily invested in payday lending, deliberate marketing of credit cards, and aggressive buying and selling of debt. If you have a mortgage, it might be bought or sold several times over the course of the payoff cycle. It can be difficult or impossible to figure out something simple like how to get tax information related to a loan. That has to stop. Households that have been badly affected by the COVID economy may have to liquidate assets or rely on debt.
4. Let's reduce the burden on small businesses, or businesses of any size, related to having an employee.
The countries that have best weathered the coronavirus emergency have been those where medical care is not tied to employment. Centralized medical care and intelligent medical leave policies have helped reduce large scale infection. The boot-strappin' individualist cowboy approach isn't doing well.
5. Instead of harping on increases in the minimum wage, let's equalize the minimum wage for all workers including people in the restaurant, child care, farm labor, and tipped service communities.
There's more, I'm sure, although even just one or two of these improvements could improve life significantly for the working poor while making very little difference to the honest rich. The dishonest rich will be screwed, but I'm OK with that.