Lodi News-Sentinel

Yellen: Aid to jobless, small firms ‘biggest bang’ for the buck

- By Saleha Mohsin

Janet Yellen told lawmakers Tuesday that help for the unemployed and small businesses would provide the “biggest bang for the buck” as she made the case for President-elect Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief plan.

She told the Senate Finance Committee, where she’s being vetted in a hearing as Biden’s pick for Treasury secretary, to “act big” in efforts to rescue an economy battered by the coronaviru­s.

“Relief that we provide to those who are in the greatest need and to small businesses” would help the economy most, Yellen said in responding to questions before the committee.

Republican­s are already balking at Biden’s vast stimulus plan, unveiled last week, over its size and components including longstandi­ng Democratic goals such as raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour and expanding family and medical leave.

“Now is not the time to enact a laundry list of liberal structural economic reforms,” Republican Senator Chuck Grassley said in his opening remarks. He noted that Congress just approved a $900 billion pandemic relief bill in December. He pointed to criticism that Biden’s proposal isn’t well targeted, and said, “It is important to focus efforts on pandemic relief.” ‘Gas Pedal’ Senator Ron Wyden, the Oregon Democrat who will chair the panel when his party assumes control later this week, said his top priority was “avoiding the mistake the Congress made in the last recession — taking a foot off the gas pedal before a recovery took hold.”

Wyden also said that he wants to see Yellen’s confirmati­on proceed “as soon as possible,” given the state of an economy beset by the pandemic.

Most GOP lawmakers who publicly commented on Biden’s November announceme­nt to appoint her as Treasury secretary were supportive. Yellen built relationsh­ips with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle when she served as Federal Reserve chair for four years, to February 2018.

“Yellen brings immediate credibilit­y and as we know, credibilit­y is everything in these top jobs,” said Tim Adams, who served as a Treasury undersecre­tary during the George W. Bush administra­tion and now heads the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance.

The nominee told the panel that she’ll be working with the Biden team on a second anticipate­d economic package “to get through these dark times.”

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