Royal Oak Tribune

Bidenomics: More stimulus, tougher regulation, and gridlock

- By Christophe­r Rugaber and Tali Arbel

WASHINGTON » Presidente­lect Joe Biden will inherit a vulnerable economic recovery under threat from a resurgent virus, likely with a divided Congress that will hinder his ability to address the challenges.

Yet despite the obstacles, the former vice president and senator will pursue a drastic shift in America’s economic policy. He has vowed to reverse much of the Trump administra­tion’s aggressive deregulati­on and indifferen­ce to domestic spending and economic developmen­t in favor of big investment­s in education, infrastruc­ture and clean energy. He wants stricter rules to rein in big tech companies and to fight climate change.

And to help pay for it all, the president- elect would turn to large tax increases for corporatio­ns and wealthy individual­s by reversing much of President Donald Trump’s tax cuts.

Biden is already distinguis­hing himself from Trump in his approach to the pandemic, which economists generally see as the gravest threat to the recovery. Trump saw the pandemic’s impact on the economy through the lens of government-mandated shutdowns: He argued that to fight the pandemic by imposing curbs on faceto-face businesses like restaurant­s — the approach favored by most health experts — was to doom the economy. Yet even when states reopened, many consumers stayed cautious about dining out, going to movies or flying.

“It wasn’t all about shutdowns — it was about people getting scared,” said Claudia Sahm, a former Federal Reserve economist. “I imagine people are getting scared again.”

Biden’s view reflects the warning from most economists that until the virus is controlled, the economy cannot fully recover.

“It starts with doing everything possible to get the COVID-19 under control,” Biden said Monday, “so that we can reopen our businesses safely and sustainabl­y.”

Striking an ominous tone, the president- elect has warned, “We’re still facing a very dark winter,” with confirmed cases surging by roughly 120,000 a day — four times the pace of last spring.

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