Thursday, March 7, 2024

Biden vs. Trump on spending, inflation

Presented by Bank Policy Institute: Delivered daily by 8 a.m., Morning Money examines the latest news in finance politics and policy.
Mar 07, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO Morning Money

By Victoria Guida and Zachary Warmbrodt

Presented by

Bank Policy Institute

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QUICK FIX

Tonight, when President Joe Biden delivers his State of the Union address, he’ll make the pitch to Americans that the economy is much better off now than it was when he took office.

But he’ll also lay out a forward-looking agenda that could shape what the economy looks like for the next four years. Whether he or Donald Trump wins the White House in November will have implications for inflation, economic growth, the deficit and more.

MM talked to economists about what could be in store under the next president.

Government spending: The economy, which grew 3.1 percent in 2023, is expected to expand more slowly this year in the face of still-restrictive interest rates from the Federal Reserve. But experts doubt there will be a surge in spending by Congress in 2025, given heightened concerns about inflation and deficits.

Biden has talked about making deficit reduction a priority, though he has focused mostly on revenue-raising measures, like hiking taxes on the wealthy and beefing up IRS enforcement.

“I just don’t see a big fiscal stimulus coming out of a Biden second term,” said Josh Bivens, chief economist at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute.

Still, budget deficits are likely to remain elevated under Biden or Trump, said Libby Cantrill, head of U.S. public policy at PIMCO.

“The extent of those deficits will, in part, depend on the composition of Congress and whether either candidate has united control of Congress or not,” she said. “If there is a Republican sweep, we would expect Trump to extend all of the expiring Tax Cuts and Jobs Act-related taxes and be supportive of more defense spending. On the other hand, if there is a Democratic sweep, we would expect Biden to extend many of the expiring tax cuts as well as be supportive of both defense and non-defense spending.”

A big question mark relates to the fate of the Inflation Reduction Act, which is funding investments in clean energy. Republicans are attacking the law, which they argue reduces efficiency and increases costs by picking winners and losers, but undoing it may create a new set of economic problems.

“Right now the sector is proceeding under the impression that a build-out of clean energy will be subsidized and will be producing lots of our energy by the end of 2030,” Bivens said. “Clawing back subsidies and making energy producers scramble to figure out how they’ll be satisfying future energy demand in totally different ways could definitely lead to price spikes and volatility.”

Inflation: The rate at which the cost of living is rising has slowed markedly in the past year and a half, inching closer to the Fed’s 2 percent target. Part of that story is that strong demand for labor has been met with more foreign-born workers.

Michael Strain, director of economic policy studies at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said Trump’s talk of “closing the border” and deporting millions of undocumented immigrants could lead to higher costs in certain sectors — particularly those that employ a lot of immigrants such as restaurants, hotels and fresh produce — but might not actually lead to generalized prices increases.

“It is possible, certainly, that it could spark a wage-price spiral, which would be inflationary,” he said. “I’m just not totally sure that we should expect that.”

Bivens said immigration helps reduce price pressures because while immigrants are both consumers and workers, they tend to be employed at higher rates than current residents, which leads to higher output. “If a future Trump administration really did deport millions of workers, that would be inflationary,” he said.

The prospect of more Trump tariffs — the former president has talked 10 percent across the board and 60 percent on Chinese goods — would also raise prices on the affected goods, but it depends.

Cantrill said tariffs could potentially be a meaningful drag on growth and have inflationary impacts, though she said Trump might not have the unilateral authority to put those measures in place. If the duties are more targeted, like they were in his first term, “the impact on growth and inflation would be much more de minimis,” she said.

For his part, Biden has kept a lot of the Trump tariffs in place.

Bivens argues that more tariffs could lead to a further decoupling of the U.S. and Chinese economies.

“That might be a small drag on near-term growth but might provide some better resilience in the form of supply-chain diversification,” he said.

Happy Thursday — If you stay up to watch SOTU, let us know what you think. Send reaction to zwarmbrodt@politico.com.

 

A message from Bank Policy Institute:

97% of the public agrees: The Federal Reserve’s Basel Endgame proposal will create a drag on our economy for years to come and will hurt working families and small businesses. Tell regulators that it’s time to #StopBaselEndgame and re-propose. Learn more at StopBaselEndgame.com.

 
Driving the day

DOL updates fourth-quarter productivity data at 8:30 a.m. … Fed Chair Jerome Powell testifies at Senate Banking at 9:40 a.m. … Jordan Peterson is among the witnesses at the House weaponization subcommittee’s hearing on big banks at 10 a.m. … Biden gives his State of the Union address at 9 p.m.

SOTU preview — The Biden administration previewed some of what the president will say on economic policy in a call with reporters Wednesday night, including their pitch for how they will lower costs for Americans. That includes their “strike force” on unfair and illegal prices, cracking down on so-called junk fees and urging the Federal Trade Commission to go after companies that engage in “shrinkflation,” where companies charge the same amount for less product.

Biden will also talk extensively about proposed tax policy, including raising the corporate tax rate to 28 percent and the corporate minimum tax to 21 percent, as well as expanding the child tax credit.

Ahead of the speech, Consumer Bankers Association CEO Lindsey Johnson will offer a prebuttal of sorts in House testimony, where she’ll urge agencies to “stop writing regulations for short-term political wins.”

Steven Mnuchin’s back — Not that he really went away, but the former Treasury secretary made headlines Wednesday after his Liberty Strategic Capital led a $1 billion equity investment in the ailing New York Community Bancorp. Former Trump-era Comptroller of the Currency Joseph Otting is the bank’s new CEO. Otting also once led OneWest, the bank Mnuchin formed from the failed IndyMac.

“It’s a very bullish signal for the American banking system to have this recap happen,” Keefe, Bruyette and Woods CEO Tom Michaud told MM Wednesday as the news broke.

CNBC reports that the deal is “the latest example of private equity players coming to the need of a wounded American lender.”

“Public markets are too slow for this kind of capital raise,” Yale’s Steven Kelly says in the piece. “They’re great if you are doing an IPO and you aren’t in a sensitive environment.”

Climate controversy — As MM previewed yesterday, the SEC’s hours-old climate-risk disclosure rule is facing a deluge of complaints from interest groups and lawmakers.

Declan Harty reports that nine Republican-led states have already unveiled plans to challenge the rule. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is considering litigation, as are environmental advocates including the Sierra Club.

Eleanor Mueller reports that the rule is upsetting Republicans and Democrats alike.

On the left, Sen. Elizabeth Warren in a statement called the final rule “the bare minimum.”

“I am deeply disappointed by Chair [Gary] Gensler’s decision to significantly weaken the rule in response to an onslaught of corporate lobbying,” Warren said

Republicans are gearing up to fight the rule in Congress. Rep. Bill Huizenga and Sen. Tim Scott are prepping legislation to block it, and House Financial Services Chair Patrick McHenry said his committee is planning hearings on what he calls “gross regulatory overreach.” Sen. Joe Manchin said he would consider backing legislation to overturn the rule.

 

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Regulatory Corner

Powell on capital — Fed Chair Jerome Powell told House lawmakers that it’s a “very plausible option” that regulators will re-propose plans to hike capital requirements for large lenders. Such a move would be a win for big banks that are fighting the proposal.

“I do expect there will be broad and material changes,” he said.

On the Hill

First in MM: Republicans on liquidity — Eleanor reports that House GOP lawmakers led by Rep. Andy Barr are urging bank regulators to reduce the stigma associated with discount window borrowing before they revamp liquidity risk management rules. Twelve Republicans on House Financial Services – every member of the financial institutions subcommittee, which Barr chairs — signed a letter to the Fed, FDIC and OCC.

“Although the discount window can be a lender of last resort, banks must be willing to use the discount window before they turn to a fire sale of assets and pull back on lending,” they said.

Schumer: Will he or won’t he? — Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Wednesday revived hope for floor action on a bipartisan bank executive accountability bill (the RECOUP Act) and marijuana banking legislation (the SAFER Banking Act). MM will believe it when we see it.

“We believe very strongly in so many things and we are going to continue to work on the agenda that we put before us,” Schumer said. “We first have to fund the government, the supplemental is very important. But after that, you will see us turn to many of the bills that we passed — the SAFER Act, safety on the rails, RECOUP, so many other things.”

 

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Crypto

Behnam on the Hill — CFTC Chair Rostin Behnam urged House Agriculture members to pass legislation that would expand his agency’s authority to police crypto markets, Meredith Lee Hill reports.

“We need to fill the gap in crypto regulation,” he said. "This notion of crypto just going away I think is a false narrative.”

Behnam said it “wouldn’t be an understatement to suggest that there is another period of irrational exuberance going on with the price swings and the volatility.” He added that it "validates the fact that Congress needs to act to fill that gap,” specifically around Bitcoin and Ethereum.

ICYMI: Crypto won Super Tuesday — Per Jasper Goodman, candidates that the crypto industry spent millions backing in California, Alabama and Texas advanced in their primary contests this week.

Economy

C-suite angst and optimism — A Business Roundtable quarterly survey of CEOs found that 75 percent believe government policies are undermining American free enterprise. Of those executives, 92 percent cited excessive regulation and 63 percent cited overreaching antitrust action.

But it’s not all bad. CEOs reported ramping up plans for hiring and capital investment as well as expectations for sales.

On a related note, MM has a first look at a new Goldman Sachs survey that found that only 34 percent of small business owners have a good sense of what federal programs, services and tax credits are available to them. More than 90 percent want a revamp of the SBA.

 

A message from Bank Policy Institute:

Consumer advocates and bankers agree: Basel Endgame is bad for working Americans.

Mario Lopez, Hispanic Leadership Fund: "Increasing the amount of capital banks must hold limits their ability to offer affordable and accessible credit. Naturally, more stringent requirements will force banks to reduce credit to many low-income Americans, especially those with lower credit scores. Banks would also be much less likely to increase credit card limits and provide home equity lines of credit. This reduction in available credit could kick many Americans while they are down, increasing their credit utilization and potentially hurting their credit scores."

National Bankers Association: “…Basel III could have a myriad of sweeping, unintended consequences, potentially discouraging large banks’ investments in minority depository institutions (MDIs) and community development financial institutions (CDFIs)…”

Learn more at StopBaselEndgame.com.

 
 

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