Sentinel & Enterprise

Biden unveils infrastruc­ture plan to ‘win the future’

- By Jonathan Lemire, Kevin Freking and Zeke Miller

» President Biden on Wednesday outlined a $2.3 trillion plan to re-engineer the nation’s infrastruc­ture over the next eight years in what he billed as “a once in a generation investment in America” that would undo his predecesso­r’s signature legislativ­e achievemen­t of giant tax cuts for corporatio­ns in the process.

Speaking at a carpenters union training center in Pittsburgh, Biden drew comparison­s between his hard-hatted proposed transforma­tion of the U.S. economy and the space race — and promised results as grand in scale as the New Deal or Great Society programs that shaped the 20th century.

“It’s not a plan that tinkers around the edges,” Biden said. “It’s a once-in-a-generation investment in America unlike anything we’ve seen or done since we built the interstate highway system and the space race decades ago. In fact, it’s the largest American jobs investment since World War II. It will create millions of jobs, good-paying jobs.”

White House officials say the spending would generate those jobs as the country shifts away from fossil fuels and combats the perils of climate change. It is also an effort to compete with the technology and public investment­s made by China, which has the world’s second-largest economy and is fast gaining on the United States’ dominant position.

“I’m convinced that if we act now, in 50 years people are going to look back and say this is the moment when America won the future,” Biden said.

Funding for the infrastruc­ture projects would come from a hike on corporate taxes that would aim to raise the necessary piles of money over 15 years and then reduce the deficit going forward. In doing so, Biden would undo the action by Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s to lift the corporate tax rate to 28% from the 21% rate set in a 2017 overhaul.

“Ninety-one Fortune 500 Companies, including Amazon, pay not a single solitary penny in income tax,” Biden said.

Wednesday’s announceme­nt will be followed in coming weeks by Biden pushing a companion bill of roughly equal size for investment­s in child care, family tax credits and other domestic programs. That nearly $2 trillion package would be paid for by tax hikes on wealthy individual­s and families.

“Wall Street didn’t build this country,” Biden said. “You, the great middle class, built this country. And unions built the middle class.”

Biden’s choice of Pittsburgh for unveiling the plan carried important economic and political resonance. He not only won Pittsburgh and its surroundin­g county to help secure the presidency, but he launched his campaign there in 2019. The city famed for steel mills that powered America’s industrial rise has steadily pivoted toward technology and health care, drawing in college graduates in a sign of how economies can change.

The Democratic president’s infrastruc­ture projects would be financed by higher corporate taxes — a trade-off that could lead to fierce resistance from the business community and thwart attempts to work with Republican­s lawmakers. Biden hopes to pass an infrastruc­ture plan by summer, which could mean relying solely on the slim Democratic majorities in the House and the Senate.

The White House says the largest chunk of the proposal includes $621 billion for roads, bridges, public transit, electric vehicle charging stations and other transporta­tion infrastruc­ture. The spending would push the country away from internal combustion engines that the auto industry views as an increasing­ly antiquated technology.

An additional $111 billion would go to replace lead water pipes and upgrade sewers. Broadband internet would blanket the country for $100 billion. Separately, $100 billion would upgrade the power grid to deliver clean electricit­y. Homes would get retrofitte­d, schools modernized, workers trained and hospitals renovated under the plan, which also seeks to strengthen U.S. manufactur­ing.

The new constructi­on could keep the economy running hot, coming on the heels of Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package. Economists already estimate it could push growth above 6% this year.

To keep companies from shifting profits overseas to avoid taxation, a 21% global minimum tax would be imposed. The tax code would also be updated so that companies could not merge with a foreign business and avoid taxes by moving their headquarte­rs to a tax haven. And among other provisions, it would increase IRS audits of corporatio­ns.

Biden appealed for Republican­s and the business community to join him in negotiatio­ns on the bill, but the legislativ­e prospects for Biden’s twin proposals already appear to hinge on Democrats coming up with the votes on their own through the budget reconcilia­tion process, which requires just a simple majority in the 50-50 Senate.

“I’m going to bring Republican­s into the Oval Office, listen to them, what they have to say and be open to other ideas,” Biden said. “We’ll have a good faith negotiatio­n. Any Republican who wants to help get this done. But we have to get it done.”

Democratic leaders embraced Biden’s plan on Wednesday. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York said it would create millions of jobs.

“I look forward to working with President Biden to pass a big, bold plan that will drive America forward for decades to come,” Schumer said at an event in Buffalo.

But key GOP and business leaders were already panning the package. “It seems like President Biden has an insatiable appetite to spend more money and raise people’s taxes,” Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the GOP whip, said in an interview.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell dismissed Biden’s package as nothing more than a “Trojan horse” for tax hikes.

The business community favors updating U.S. infrastruc­ture but dislikes higher tax rates. U.S. Chamber of Commerce Executive Vice President and Chief Policy Officer Neil Bradley, said in a statement that “we applaud the Biden administra­tion for making infrastruc­ture a top priority. However, we believe the proposal is dangerousl­y misguided when it comes to how to pay for infrastruc­ture.” The Business Roundtable, a group of CEOs, would rather have infrastruc­ture funded with user fees such as tolls.

Trump, in a statement, blasted his successor’s proposal, claiming it “would be among the largest self-inflicted economic wounds in history.”

Infrastruc­ture spending usually holds the promise of juicing economic growth, but by how much remains a subject of political debate. Commutes and shipping times could be shortened, while public health would be improved and constructi­on jobs would bolster consumer spending. Standard & Poor’s chief U.S. economist, Beth Ann Bovino, estimated last year that a $2.1 trillion boost in infrastruc­ture spending could add as much as $5.7 trillion in income to the entire economy over a decade. Those kinds of analyses have led liberal Democrats in Congress such as Washington Rep. Pramila Jayapal to conclude Tuesday, “The economic consensus is that infrastruc­ture pays for itself over time.”

But the Biden administra­tion is taking a more cautious approach than some Democrats might like. After $1.9 trillion in pandemic aid and $4 trillion in relief last year, the administra­tion is trying to avoid raising the national debt to levels that would trigger higher interest rates and make it harder to repay.

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 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER / NYTNS ?? President Biden speaks about his infrastruc­ture plan at the Carpenters Pittsburgh Training Center on Wednesday.
ANNA MONEYMAKER / NYTNS President Biden speaks about his infrastruc­ture plan at the Carpenters Pittsburgh Training Center on Wednesday.

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