Texarkana Gazette

Raising taxes no way to fund infrastruc­ture bill

- BLOOMBERG VIEW

With the COVID-19 relief bill behind us, attention is turning to infrastruc­ture — a long-standing priority for President Joe Biden’s economic recovery program. A big infrastruc­ture bill would achieve multiple goals at the same time: putting Americans to work, raising wages, strengthen­ing the economy, improving industrial competitiv­eness and speeding the transition to green energy. Given the confluence of all of these urgent goals, Congress should not balk at the borrowing need- ed to pay for the bill.

Traditiona­lly, American infrastruc­ture bills have been a grim necessity that maintain the existing economy without really improving it. Civil engineers will warn that our roads and bridges are decaying, and after years of that the federal government will lob a pot of money at the problem, along with a smattering of new constructi­on projects. The roads and bridges get patched into passable condition, some constructi­on workers get jobs, and the system creaks along for another few years.

Biden’s bill will almost certainly be different. The ambitious plans laid out by his campaign amount to nothing less than a transforma­tion of the U.S. economy. Biden’s biggest goals include a massive shift toward green energy, promotion of domestic manufactur­ing and an emphasis on caregiving jobs that are expected to provide mass middle-class employment in the coming decades.

It’s not yet clear how much of this will actually make it into an infrastruc­ture bill. The first big question is whether Biden will use the reconcilia­tion process in the next fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1. Given that not even one Republican senator voted in favor of Biden’s COVID-19 relief bill, despite the fact that it was popular with Republican voters, suggests that reconcilia­tion is probably the way to go.

Using reconcilia­tion will limit the bill to fiscal measures, meaning that a lot of the regulatory efforts Biden wants — for example, mandating higher fuel-economy standards — might have to be stripped out and addressed in separate legislatio­n.

But the spending items will be the really crucial part. Speeding the transition to green energy is the country’s most important economic task because it combines the existentia­l imperative of fighting climate change with the economic promise of cheaper energy. The amazing decline in the cost of solar and batteries promises to spark a productivi­ty revolution in many other sectors of the economy — including manufactur­ing — but it will require big investment­s in order to realize that potential.

So it’s time to go big in terms of government investment. Biden’s plan would be the modern equivalent of the interstate highway system, which built denser economic connection­s between America’s far-flung regions, ultimately giving the economy a significan­t boost. That didn’t come cheap, though; interstate constructi­on helped push government investment to 7% of GDP, compared to less than 4% today:

That will require a lot of government borrowing. Unfortunat­ely, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a powerful centrist whom many regard as casting the decisive vote, has declared that any infrastruc­ture bill should be financed by tax increases rather than by further deficits.

That’s exactly the wrong approach. As I explained in a previous column, a transforma­tional green infrastruc­ture push is just the kind of thing we should be borrowing to fund. Not only is it a one-time expense, but it will yield an economic return in terms of cheaper energy that boosts the private sector for many decades to come.

Private companies borrow to fund big investment­s all the time; to demand that the government pay for the transition to green energy entirely out of tax revenues would be like insisting that companies pay for major capital projects out of current revenues. In other words, it makes no sense. Taxes are necessary for funding ongoing social expenditur­es, like Biden’s child allowance; they’re not the way to pay for big one-time investment­s.

 ?? Noah Smith ??
Noah Smith

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