Montreal Gazette

Yellen urges U.S. to `act big' to address COVID-19

- DAVID LAWDER and ANDREA SHALAL

WASHINGTON Janet Yellen, U.S. president-elect Joe Biden's nominee for Treasury Secretary, urged lawmakers on Tuesday to “act big ” on coronaviru­s relief spending, arguing that the economic benefits far outweigh the risks of a higher debt burden.

In more than three hours of confirmati­on hearing testimony, the former Federal Reserve chairwoman laid out a vision of a more muscular Treasury that would act aggressive­ly to reduce economic inequality, fight climate change and counter China's unfair trade and subsidy practices.

Taxes on corporatio­ns and the wealthy will eventually need to rise to help finance Biden's ambitious plans for investing in infrastruc­ture, research and developmen­t and worker training to improve the U.S. economy's competitiv­eness, she told lawmakers. But that would only come after reining in the pandemic, which has killed over 400,000, and the economic devastatio­n it brought.

Yellen, who spoke by video link, said her task as Treasury chief will be to help Americans endure the final months of the pandemic as the population is vaccinated, and rebuild the U.S. economy to make it more competitiv­e and create more prosperity and more jobs. “Without further action we risk a longer, more painful recession now and longer-term scarring of the economy later,” she said.

Yellen said that pandemic relief would take priority over tax increases, but said that corporatio­ns and the wealthy, which both benefited from 2017 Republican tax cuts, “need to pay their fair share.”

She also said the value of the dollar should be determined by markets, a break from departing President Donald Trump's desire for a weaker U.S. currency.

Wall Street stocks rose Tuesday in reaction to Yellen's call for a hefty stimulus package, as well as to positive bank earnings updates.

Biden outlined a Us$1.9-trillion stimulus package proposal last week.

Asked what outlays would provide the biggest “bang for the buck,” Yellen said spending on public health and widespread vaccinatio­ns was the first step. Extended unemployme­nt and nutrition aid, better known as food stamps, should be next, she said. “Neither the president-elect, nor I, propose this relief package without an appreciati­on for the country's debt burden. But right now, with interest rates at historic lows, the smartest thing we can do is act big,” Yellen told the Senate Finance Committee.

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Janet Yellen

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