Dayton Daily News

Republican­s stand ready, able to sabotage recovery

- PaulKrugma­n PaulKrugma­nwrites forThe NewYorkTim­es.

The not-a-stimulus deal reached by Congress over the weekend — seriously, this is about disaster relief, not boosting the economy — didn’t come a moment too soon. Actually, it came much too late: Crucial aid to many unemployed Americans and businesses expired months ago. But now some of that aid could be back, for a while.

True, the aid would be less generous than it was in the spring and summer: $300 a week in enhanced unemployme­nt benefits, rather than $600. But because the workers still out of a job as a result of the pandemic tended to have low earnings even before the coronaviru­s struck, they will, on average, be receiving something like 85% of their preCOVID-19 income.

So what’s not to like about this relief package? There’s some dumb stuff, like a tax break for corporate meal expenses — fighting a deadly pandemic with three-martini lunches. But the serious problem is that economic aid will end far too soon: Enhanced unemployme­nt benefits will last just 11 weeks. And the process by which the deal was reached has ominous implicatio­ns for the future.

Why isn’t 11 weeks of aid enough? Because we won’t be able to begin a vigorous economic recovery until a large fraction of the population is vaccinated, which might not happen until the summer or even the early fall. And we’re still down around 10 million jobs from pre-COVID levels. And the way the bill was passed offers few reasons to be optimistic about Republican willingnes­s to let the Biden administra­tion finish the project.

Remember, until recently Mitch McConnell showed little interest in passing any kind of relief package. And there’s no mystery about what changed his mind: It was all about the Senate runoffs in Georgia. “Kelly (Loeffler) and David (Perdue) are getting hammered” he told his political allies.

Once those races end on Jan. 5, McConnell’s sure to lose interest all over again. And unless Democrats win both elections, he’ll still be Senate majority leader, in a position to stand in the way of any further economic relief. Although the pandemic recession was deep and ugly, it could easily have been even uglier. For a few weeks in March, America teetered on the edge of a financial crisis. Fortunatel­y, however, this incipient crisis was quickly contained by the Federal Reserve, which stabilized markets by purchasing trillions of dollars’ worth of financial assets and making it clear that it would do more if necessary.

That was a job well done. But the risk of financial crisis hasn’t gone away, so we want to make sure that the Fed has the tools to meet future challenges.

Yet last month Steven Mnuchin, the blessedly departing Treasury secretary, gratuitous­ly clawed back hundreds of billions in budget backing for Fed emergency lending programs, making those funds unavailabl­e to his successor. And talks over economic relief almost fell apart over a last-minute demand by Sen. Pat Toomey, backed by the Republican leadership, that the legislatio­n bar the Fed from restarting some of these programs.

In the end, this poison pill appears to have been rendered mostly harmless, with face-saving language that prevents exact copycat programs but seems to leave room for slightly different programs that would achieve the same results.

But the episode was a preview of things to come. If another crisis develops, expect Republican­s to do all they can to prevent an effective response.

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