Post Tribune (Sunday)

Biden betting big on wage growth

GOP: President’s policies are already spurring inflation

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON — The Bid en administra­tion recently gave a bit of simple advice to businesses that are unable to find workers: Offer them more money.

This recommenda­tion, included in a White House memo about the state of the economy, gets at a fundamenta­l tension in an economy that is returning to full health after the coronaviru­s pandemic. Businesses are coping with spiking prices for goods such as steel, plywood, plastics and asphalt. Yet workers, after enduring a year of job losses, business closures and social distancing, are no longer interested in accepting low wages.

Administra­tion officials say the White House is not trying to target a specific wage level for workers. But officials say higher wages are a goal of President Joe Biden and a byproduct of his $1.9 trillion relief package and at least $3.5 trillion in additional spending being proposed for infrastruc­ture and education.

Boosting wages gets at the central promise of the Biden presidency to improve the lives of everyday Americans and restore the country’s competitiv­e edge in the world. Republican­s say that Biden’s policies have already let loose a torrent of inflation that will hurt the economy. The outcome of these competing forces could decide the trajectory of the U.S. economy as well as the factors weighing on voters in next year’s elections.

White House economic adviser Jared Bernstein said the goal is “to pull forward a robust, inclusive recovery that provides good employment opportunit­ies to people who have been the heroes of this pandemic, folks who are in the bottom half, who went to work, often in unsafe conditions, or had to stay home to take care of their families and deal with school closures and childcare constraint­s.”

The New York Federal Reserve reported a 26% increase over the past year in wage expectatio­ns by noncollege graduates. The lowest average salary they expect for a new job is $61,483, up more than $12,700 from a year ago.

The wage pressures feeds into some anxiety about inflation. The Biden team sees the 0.8% month-overmonth jump in consumer prices in April as temporary, a sign of consumer demand and the bottleneck­s that naturally occur when an economy restarts. But newly released minutes from the Fed’s April meeting suggest the U.S. central bank could raise interest rates earlier than previously indicated to stamp down inflation and potentiall­y limit economic growth.

The monthly jobs and inflation data can be volatile as the economy restarts, such that a single month could be an outlier instead of an underlying trend. Biden’s aides are choosing to look at moving three-month averages on economic data and they see the situation as positive. They also said more people will accept jobs as vaccinatio­ns increase.

The Senate’s Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, has told voters that Biden’s decision to provide an additional $300 a week in unemployme­nt benefits and the spending in his relief package are hurting the economy.

He said Thursday on Fox Business that the package “Democrats jammed through on a party-line vote” is “producing both people not wanting to work and raging inflation.”

Part of the dispute between Biden and Republican­s is on how economies grow. The administra­tion has embraced a philosophy of investing in workers and providing them with benefits to make it easier for them to juggle life responsibi­lities and jobs.

Republican­s believe the key is to minimize taxes and other barriers for employers so that lower operating costs lead them to invest and hire. The Republican National Committee issued an analysis Friday saying that the GOP’s principles for growth were superior because the average unemployme­nt rate in states led by party officials is 4.6%, while Democratic states have an average unemployme­nt rate of 6.3%.

Republican­s see the $ 3 0 0 - a -we e k federal unemployme­nt payment as discouragi­ng people from working because they can earn more money by staying unemployed. Their view is that this limits how many jobs can be created and how high wages will rise.

It’s not clear how much of a deterrent the added payments are, but there are early indication­s that the impact might be modest so far on people accepting jobs.

An analysis by economists at the San Francisco Fed found that “each month in early 2021, about seven out of 28 unemployed individual­s receive job offers that they would normally accept, but one of the seven decides to decline the offer due to the availabili­ty of the extra $300 per week” in unemployme­nt benefits.

There are 23 states — all with Republican governors and GOP-controlled legislatur­es — that plan to block the enhanced federal benefits in June, under the belief that the loss of income will cause people to take jobs.

Aaron Sojourner, a labor economist at the University of Minnesota, warned that scrapping the benefits could reduce families’ incomes and possibly encourage employers to pay less such that workers’ incomes might be depressed.

“Lower wages is exactly the premise of the Republican position,” Sojourner said.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? White House officials say higher wages are a goal of President Biden and a byproduct of key legislatio­n he has championed since being elected. Republican­s believe minimizing taxes and lowering barriers is key to economic recovery.
EVAN VUCCI/AP White House officials say higher wages are a goal of President Biden and a byproduct of key legislatio­n he has championed since being elected. Republican­s believe minimizing taxes and lowering barriers is key to economic recovery.

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