Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Biden stakes success on relief plan

$1.9T aid package targets pandemic damage, inequality

- By Josh Boak and Lisa Mascaro

The president is betting his $1.9 trillion virus aid bill can both stop the pandemic and catapult the nation forward.

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden wants America to know that he’s from the government and he’s here to help.

That sentiment became a well-worn punchline under President Ronald Reagan and shaped the politics of both parties for four decades. Democratic President Bill Clinton declared the era of big government over in the 1990s, President Barack Obama largely kept his party in the same lane and Republican President Donald Trump campaigned on the premise that Washington was full of morons, outplayed by the Chinese and others.

But Biden is now staking his presidency on the idea that the government can use his $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief plan not only to stop a pandemic and jobs crisis but also to catapult the country forward to tackle deep issues of poverty, inequality and more. The bill could be approved by Congress as early as Wednesday.

“When I was elected, I said we were going to get the government out of the business of battling on Twitter and back in the business of delivering for the American people,” Biden said after the bill passed the Senate on Saturday. “Of showing the American people that their government can work for them.”

Taken together, provisions in the 628-page bill add up to one of the largest enhancemen­ts to the social safety net in decades, pushing the country into uncharted territory.

Besides stopping the pandemic and jump-starting hiring, money in the rescue package — now awaiting final approval in the House — is supposed to start fixing income inequality, halve child poverty, feed the hungry, save pensions, sustain public transit, let schools reopen with confidence and help repair state and local government finances. And Biden is betting that the government can do all of this with the speed of a nation mobilizing for war without touching a tripwire of inflation.

“People have lost faith government can do good for them,” says Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who spoke daily with Biden while ushering the bill through the Senate last weekend. Now, as vaccines become more available and other changes take place, “people are going to see that government actually is making their lives better — which is how Americans used to think of it, and we’ve gotten away from it.”

Republican­s say there are plenty of reason sto be skeptical, calling the American Rescue Plan excessive and wasteful. They warn the sweeping package will run up the national debt to precarious new heights after $4 trillion in aid has already been provided.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell argues against the package as missing the moment — too big at a time when the virus is showing signs of easing and the economy is poised to come “roaring” back.

Instead of working across the aisle toward unity, as Biden has promised, McConnell says Democrats are “ramming through what they call ‘the most progressiv­e domestic legislatio­n in a generation,’ ” quoting the White House chief of staff.

“They explained their intent very clearly: to exploit this crisis as ‘a tremendous opportunit­y to restructur­e things to fit our vision,’ ” McConnell said. This is the first COVID-19 bill that had zero support from Republican­s in the House or Senate.

Biden’s bet, more than others in modern politics and economics, is full of questions.

Can the federal money push economic growth above 6% for the first time since Reagan in 1984? Will the 9.5 million lost jobs quickly return? Will inflation surge? Will the national debt spook voters in next year’s midterm elections? Biden has placed the biggest of markers on the theories of the 20th-century British economist John Maynard Keynes that the government can stimulate a dormant economy back to health.

Sweeping in scope, Biden’s plan largely relies on existing health care and tax credits, rather than new programs, but it expands that standard fare in ambitious new ways that are designed to reach more people who are suffering in an unpreceden­ted time.

“We haven’t done this before,” said Syracuse University economics professor Len Burman, a co-founder of the Tax Policy Center. “If it actually does work the way it does in theory and the economy is back at full employment in a year, that would be amazing. It would save a lot of hardship and suffering.”

But Burman also has misgivings about the design of Biden’s package because it distribute­s direct payments and other benefits to almost every U.S. household, rather than directing money to the poor and to businesses and organizati­ons most damaged by the pandemic and ensuing shutdowns.

“It kind of reminded me of this idea when I was in grad school of helicopter money — which was basically dropping money from the air and seeing if it raised incomes,” he said. “The money could have been better targeted.”

But final passage of the bill will just be the start. The administra­tion will have to show that the funds can be spent effectivel­y and efficientl­y, helping those in need while giving the broader public enough confidence to awaken growth through hiring and spending.

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Biden speaks with Mike Siegel, co-owner of a hardware store in Washington, during a visit Tuesday to burnish public support for the relief package. The bill could be approved by Congress as early as Wednesday.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES President Biden speaks with Mike Siegel, co-owner of a hardware store in Washington, during a visit Tuesday to burnish public support for the relief package. The bill could be approved by Congress as early as Wednesday.

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