Albany Times Union

The Biden presidency is succeeding

- DAVID BROOKS

Joe Biden came to the White House at a pivotal moment in American history. We had become a country dividing into two nations, one highly educated and affluent and the other left behind. The economic gaps inflamed cultural and social gaps, creating an atmosphere of intense polarizati­on, cultural hostility, alienation, bitterness and resentment.

As president, Biden had mostly economic levers to try to bridge this cold civil war. He championed three gigantic pieces of legislatio­n to create a more equal, more just and more united society: the COVID stimulus bill, the infrastruc­ture bill and what became Build Back Better, to invest in human infrastruc­ture.

All of these bills were written to funnel money to the parts of the country that were less educated, less affluent, left behind. Adam Hersh, a visiting economist at the Economic Policy Institute, projects that more than 80% of the new jobs created by the infrastruc­ture plan will not require a college degree.

These were bold endeavors. Some thought them too bold. Economist Larry Summers thought the stimulus package, for example, was too big. It could overstimul­ate the economy and lead to inflation.

Larry is one of the most intelligen­t people I’ve ever known and someone I really admire. If I were an economist, I might have agreed with him. But I’m a journalist with a sociologic­al bent. For over a decade I have been covering a country that was economical­ly, socially and morally coming apart. I figured one way to reverse that was to turbocharg­e the economy and create white-hot labor markets that would lift wages at the bottom. If inflation was a byproduct, so be it. The trade-off is worth it to prevent a national rupture.

The Biden $1.9 trillion stimulus package passed and has been tremendous­ly successful. The Conference Board projects that real GDP growth will be about 5% this quarter. The unemployme­nt rate is falling. Retail sales are surging. About two-thirds of Americans feel their household’s financial situation is good.

But the best part: The benefits are flowing to those down the educationa­l and income ladder. In just the first month of payments, the expanded Child Tax Credit piece of the stimulus bill kept 3 million American children out of poverty. Pay for hourly workers in the leisure and hospitalit­y sector jumped 13% in August compared with the previous year. By June, there were more nonfarm job openings than at any other time in American history.

The infrastruc­ture bill Biden just signed will boost American productivi­ty for years to come. As Ellen Zentner of Morgan Stanley told The Economist recently, it’s a rule of thumb that an extra $100 billion in annual infrastruc­ture spending could increase growth by roughly a tenth of a percentage point — which is significan­t in an economy the size of ours. Federal infrastruc­ture spending will be almost as large a share of annual GDP as the average level during Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal.

But Summers was right. The stimulus — along with all the supply chain and labor shortage disruption­s that are inevitable when coming out of a pandemic — has boosted inflation. In addition, Americans are exhausted by a pandemic that seems to never end.

And they are taking it out on Democrats. A recent ABC News/washington Post poll revealed that voters now prefer Republican congressio­nal candidates in their own districts by 51% to 41%.

If presidenci­es were judged by shortterm popularity, the Biden effort would look pretty bad. But that’s a terrible measure. First-term presidents almost always see their party get hammered in the midterm after their inaugurati­on. That’s especially true if the president achieved big things. Michigan State political scientist Matt Grossmann looked at House popular vote trends since 1953. Often when presidents succeeded in passing major legislatio­n — Republican­s as well as Democrats — voters swung against the president’s party. Look, just to take a recent example, at how Obamacare preceded a Democratic shellackin­g in 2010. People distrust change. Success mobilizes opposition. It’s often only in retrospect that these policies become popular and even sacred.

Presidents are judged by history, not the distractio­n and exhaustion of the moment. Did the person in the Oval Office address the core problem of the moment? The Biden administra­tion passes that test. Sure, there have been failures — the shameful Afghanista­n withdrawal, failing to renounce the excesses of the cultural left. But this administra­tion will be judged by whether it reduced inequality, spread opportunit­y, created the material basis for greater national unity.

It is doing that.

My fear is not that Democrats lose the midterms — it will have totally been worth it. My fear is that Democrats in Congress will make fantastic policies like the expanded Child Tax Credit temporary to make budget numbers look good. If they do that the coming Republican majorities will simply let these policies expire.

If that happens then all this will have been in vain. The Democrats will have squandered what has truly been a set of historic accomplish­ments. Voters may judge Democrats harshly next November, but if they act with strength, history will judge them well.

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