The Oakland Press

Biden says U.S. recession avoidable after call with exTreasury Secretary Summers

- By Jenny Leonard and Josh Wingrove

President Joe Biden reiterated that a U.S. recession isn’t “inevitable” following a conversati­on with former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, who sees a significan­t chance the country will find itself battling stagflatio­n.

“I was talking to Larry Summers this morning, and there’s nothing inevitable about a recession,” Biden told reporters Monday at Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. “I think we’re going to be able to get a change in Medicare and a reduction in the cost of insulin.”

The White House and congressio­nal Democrats are in talks on legislatio­n that aims to fight inflation, rein in the deficit and revive parts of Biden’s agenda. The contours of a potential deal remain under negotiatio­n, but the package would likely include capping the price of insulin -a key medicine for diabetics -- and federal investment­s in both clean energy and fossil fuels, people briefed on the talks said last week.

It would also further reduce the budget deficit and boost taxes on the wealthy, corporatio­ns or both, they said.

Democrats are desperate for a policy response to inflation, which is at a fourdecade high and, unless curbed, is all but certain to cost them control of the House, Senate or both in November’s midterm elections. Gasoline, a critical component of the American household budget, costs $5 a gallon on average nationwide, according to the AAA motor club, and hit a record earlier this month.

Seeking to quell the surge in living costs, the Federal Reserve accelerate­d its monetary-tightening campaign last week, executing the biggest interest-rate hike since 1994. The move drove fresh losses on Wall Street and has increased the odds of a recession that would only compound Biden’s political troubles.

Summers, a Harvard University professor and paid contributo­r to Bloomberg Television, has criticized the Fed for failing to account for its mistakes and to realize the damage to its credibilit­y after the latest inflation data dashed hopes that a peak had been reached.

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