The Denver Post

BIDEN ADVISERS PUSHING FOR STIMULUS DEAL

- By Jim Tankersley and Emily Cochrane

Officials for the president- elect are planning for the possibilit­y that the U. S. economy is headed for a “double- dip” recession early next year, leading them to urge Congress to come to terms on a stimulus accord.

WASHINGTON » Advisers to President- elect Joe Biden are planning for the increasing likelihood that the United States economy is headed for a “double- dip” recession early next year. They are pushing for Democratic leaders in Congress to reach a quick stimulus deal with Senate Republican­s, even if it falls short of the larger package Democrats have been seeking, according to people familiar with the discussion­s.

Until now, Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Senate Democratic leader, have insisted that Republican­s agree to a spending bill of $ 2 trillion or more, while Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate majority leader, wants a much smaller package. The resulting impasse has threatened to delay additional economic aid until after Biden’s inaugurati­on on Jan. 20.

Many of the president- elect’s advisers have become convinced that deteriorat­ing economic conditions from the renewed surge in COVID- 19 infections and the looming threat of millions of Americans losing jobless benefits in December amid a wave of evictions and foreclosur­es require more urgent action before year’s end. That could mean moving at least part of the way toward McConnell’s offer of a $ 500 billion package.

But top Democrats remain publicly adamant that Republican­s need to move closer to their opening offer of $ 2.4 trillion. Biden, Pelosi and Schumer have given no public indication of how much they are willing to scale back their ambitions in order to reach a deal with McConnell, arguing that the Republican leader has not been willing to compromise.

“The COVID- 19 pandemic and economic recession will not end without our help,” Pelosi and Schumer wrote in a letter this month, asking McConnell to resume negotiatio­ns. “It is essential that this bill have sufficient funding and delivers meaningful relief to the many Americans who are suffering.”

Biden’s team is also considerin­g a range of other policy options for fighting a renewed downturn and the prospect of rising unemployme­nt when he takes office, according to the people familiar with his plans. Some of them — such as a sweeping spending bill that includes all or large parts of his campaign proposals for infrastruc­ture — could depend on Democrats winning Senate control in two special elections in Georgia in January.

But the most important measure could be quick congressio­nal approval of a stimulus bill.

“There needs to be emergency assistance and aid during the lame- duck session to help families, to help small business,” Jen Psaki, a Biden transition aide, said Friday before a meeting with Biden, Vice Presidente­lect Kamala Harris, Pelosi and Schumer. “There’s no more room for delay, and we need to move forward as quickly as possible.”

A readout from the meeting said Biden and the other Democrats “agreed that

Congress needed to pass a bipartisan emergency aid package in the lame- duck session” but did not indicate what size package was warranted.

The economy returned to growth in the second half of this year after falling into a sharp and rapid recession. But sluggish retail sales growth in October, rising claims for unemployme­nt insurance last week and a multiweek decline in employment and hours worked at small businesses nationwide have increased the odds that the economy could tip back into recession.

“The pandemic is raging, and it’s starting to do damage again,” said Mark Zandi, an economist at Moody’s Analytics.

Economists close to Biden and his campaign are circulatin­g a spreadshee­t containing new projection­s from Zandi, which predict that the economy will begin to shrink again in the first half of next year unless lawmakers break an impasse in stimulus talks.

Such a reversal would result in what economists call a double- dip recession, even as pharmaceut­ical companies prepare to distribute COVID- 19 vaccines that lawmakers and economists hope will curb the pandemic and jolt the economy back toward rapid growth late next year or in 2022. Companies would shed 3 million jobs in the first half of 2021, Zandi projected, and the unemployme­nt rate would climb from its current rate of 6.9% back to nearly 10%.

Jared Bernstein, an economist at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities who was part of Biden’s inner circle of economic aides in the campaign, said that “speed, size and compositio­n are all important” in a stimulus agreement, “but speed is especially important.”

A dispute over the size of the package has stalled talks for months. Democrats have rejected multiple Senate Republican proposals — the latest at about $ 500 billion — as insufficie­nt to address the economy’s needs, particular­ly because they do not include money for state and local government­s to plug budget holes and avoid public- sector layoffs. Zandi said that such a package “maybe barely gets you through to a vaccine” but risks running out when the economy still needs help.

Economists are stressing the need for lawmakers to act quickly, even if that means reaching agreement on smaller package. A bipartisan group convened by the Aspen Institute’s Economic Strategy Group urged lawmakers Thursday to approve a package that includes aid to small businesses, individual­s and state and local government­s, saying the economy “cannot wait until 2021” for relief.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States