What are the economic policies of Joe Biden?

We find ourselves in unusual but not completely unfamiliar territory as the US election has yet to declare a result.As we stand Joe Biden looks most likely to win although any such win seems set to go straight to the courts. But we need to address what changes he plans for US economic policy? The first step according to Moodys will be more fiscal expansionism.

Vice President Biden has proposed a wide
range of changes to the tax code and government spending. In total, he is calling for $4.1
trillion in tax increases and an additional $7.3
trillion in government spending over the next
decade.

Moodys have taken the current zeitgeist in favour of fiscal policy and projected this impact from it.

The government’s deficits will be
$3.2 trillion larger on a static basis and $2.6
trillion on a dynamic basis, after accounting
for the benefits to the budget of the stronger
economy resulting from his policies.

Of course the “stronger economy” mentioned is an opinion and we have seen in my time here quite a shift in the establishment view on fiscal policy. A decade ago the views was that a contractionary fiscal policy could expand the economy whereas now we are told an expansionary one will. There has been a shift in the cost of borrowing which I will look at in more detail later, but even so there has been more than a little flip-flopping.

Detailed Proposals

Interestingly the fiscal expansionism comes with tax increases for some.

The largest source of new tax revenue in
the vice president’s plan comes from increasing taxes on corporations. Of the $4.1 trillion
in total tax revenue collected under his plan
over the next decade on a static basis, more
than half comes from higher corporate taxes.
The bulk of this results from an increase from
21% to 28% in the top marginal tax rate paid
by corporations.

So he is reversing half of the Trump tax cuts in this area. Next comes a tax on higher earners.

Another large source of new tax revenue in
Biden’s plan is the 12.6% Social Security payroll tax on annual earnings of more than $400,000.
The current earnings cap subject to the payroll tax is almost $138,000………..This change will put
the Social Security trust fund on much sounder
financial footing, and it will raise close to $1
trillion in revenue over the next decade on a
static basis, about one-third of the total tax
revenue raised under Biden’s plan

The theme is of taxing the rich and wealthy and which continues with what might in the past have been called a soak the rich plan.

The vice president would roll back
the tax cuts that those earning more than
$400,000 received under Trump’s TCJA, tax
capital gains and dividend income like ordinary
income for those making more than $1 million
in total income.

Spending

Here we are looking at a Spend! Spend! Spend! plan where the extra revenue above is spent and then some.

His proposal calls for additional spending of $7.9 trillion on a static basis, including on infrastructure, education, the social safety net, and healthcare, with the bulk of the
spending slated to happen during his term as
president in an effort to generate more jobs

Those who bemoan America’s infrastructure should welcome this effort.

Of all of Biden’s spending initiatives, the
most expansive is on infrastructure. On a
static basis, he would increase such spending
by $2.4 trillion for the decade—all of it to
be spent during his term.

Education too will be a beneficiary.

Biden is also calling for a large increase in
an array of educational initiatives. He proposes
to spend $1.9 trillion over 10 years on a static
basis on pre-K, K-12 and higher education (see
Table 3). Attending a public college or university would be tuition-free for children in families with incomes of less than $125,000.

I find the end to tuition fees for some to be intriguing as it is a reversal of the past direction of travel. Also there is this.

The social safety net would meaningfully
expand under Biden (see Table 4). He would
spend an additional $1.5 trillion over 10 years
on a static basis on various social programs,
with the largest outlays going to workers to
receive paid family and medical leave for up
to 12 weeks…….

And healthcare.

The healthcare system would also receive
a significant infusion of funding under a
President Biden primarily via the Affordable
Care Act…….. The 10-year static budget cost of the
proposed changes to the healthcare system
comes to nearly $1.5 trillion.

US Federal Reserve

There are a couple of streams of thought here. The first is that Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has called for more fiscal expansionism.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell called Tuesday for continued aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus for an economic recovery that he said still has “a long way to go.”

Noting progress made in job creation, goods consumption and business formation, among other areas, Powell said that now would be the wrong time for policymakers to take their foot off the gas. ( CNBC on the 6th of October)

Thus he would presumably be happy to run policies to help this. He is already in the game.

At its September meeting, the FOMC directed the Desk to increase SOMA holdings of Treasury securities at the current pace, which is the equivalent of approximately $80 billion per month.

Also he has the ability to respond should he wish without a grand announcement as these days smoothing market operations cover quite a few bases.

The Desk is prepared to increase the size and adjust the composition of its purchase operations as needed to sustain the smooth functioning of the Treasury market.

We can now take that forwards to the next perspective because the market seems to have come to its own conclusion.In the past the bond vigilantes would have driven US bond yields higher but in fact the US bond market has risen and yields fallen.I established a marker on the day of the election and the ten-year Treasury Note yield was 0.87% but as I type this it is 0.73%

Comment

The caveat to today’s post is that is by no means certain that Joe Biden will win and even if he does he seems likely to face a Republican Senate. But we do seem set for a more expansionary fiscal policy which would be oiled and polished by the US Federal Reserve.That does link to the news from the Bank of England earlier when it announced an expansion of £150 billion in its purchases of UK bonds as it too is an agent of fiscal policy these days.

Looking at the economic impact we see from Moodys that the multiplier is back.What I mean by that is fiscal spending is assumed to grow the economy which then helps to pay for it. The catch is always when you do not seem much growth ( think Italy) or if the economy contracts over a long period ( think Greece). We do know that the US economy can grow and that it has been doing better than us in Europe in the credit crunch era but whether it will grow by enough is another matter. With the rise in the Covid-19 cases though it may be a while before it gets the chance to demonstrate that and for such calculations when and how long matter.

 

37 thoughts on “What are the economic policies of Joe Biden?

  1. Yes the multiplier works – until it doesn’t, as it requires ever more spending to achieve the elusive growth, when you have to spend $5 the £10 then £20 to achieve $1 of “growth” it really isn’t stimulus anymore and since that money is being created out of thin air diluting the value of existing $, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that there is an end to this road and that is hyperinflation and currency collapse, well the Fed has on record said it wants congress to take up the spending baton as its policies are finally being seen as counterproductive, and with the Democrats in power, boy will they “spend spend spend” as Shaun has said.

    Problem? Current spending is double the tax revenue(2020 spending £6trn vs £3.4trn income), the total US debt by the time Biden enters the Whitehouse will be around $28trn and if spending carries on in this fashion by the time of the next election will be well north of $45trn.

    MMT and UBI have yet to even get fueled let alone get off the runway yet, what will the deficit be then? Add in even crazier social programmes for certain ethnic groups(Biden will be replaced soon by Kamala Harris, clue: Black Lives Matter) and there will be additional massive increases in medical spending.

    We now have the media cheering MMT, UBI and these unfunded expansions in spending as the magic bullet for the floundering economies of the world, but anyone with an IQ bigger than their shoe size would surely ask why then does anyone:
    1. Have to pay taxes – why not just keep all your income/capital gains and governments print the amount it would have recieved?.
    2. Why would anyone bother getting up in the morning to go to work, or risk capital starting a business when governments can just give everyone their incomes?

    Well this insanity has been tried many times by many countries and it was called communism then, this time it is being repackaged by the MSM as something else and the sheeple will more than likely fall for it.

    • It’s the other claw in the pincer-movement to destroy Western wealth.
      We will not accede to UN Agenda 2030 whilst we can have comfortable liberty with financial security under the present system.
      We “need” happytalism.

    • “1. Have to pay taxes – why not just keep all your income/capital gains and governments print the amount it would have recieved?.
      2. Why would anyone bother getting up in the morning to go to work, or risk capital starting a business when governments can just give everyone their incomes?”
      1) £150bn announced
      2) Furlough scheme extended to March.

      • Unless covid was done to get rid of Trump and stop BREXIT, I can’t see this Covid hysteria being allowed to die down(and to all the downvoters, we aren’t denying it is a serious illness, only the response which is out of all proportion to the threat to the healthy general population), so furloughs and lockdowns will continue, why stop now? It’s clear these decisions are not being made based on the science, the decision is made and then a load of bogus manipulated data is used to fit the narrative.Extra testing being done in Liverpool because they are the most sceptical and vocal covid deniers, even calling in the army to make the implied threat even greater.

        I saw a Tory member of the influential 1922 Committee say the other night that this is probably the last time that backbenchers would back the government in such a lockdown scenario, hmmm… we’ll see next year then.By then we should know what is happening with BREXIT, if the trade deal ever gets finalised that is.

        Enforced quarantine in New Zealand for those who refuse to take the totally discredited covid nasal swab PCR test for 14 days, if they still refuse, another 14 days detention in the “quarantine facilities”, even if they are asymptomatic!, Canadian parliament discussing such camps for Canada, don’t agree with the agenda, you are a refusnic, off to the gulag with you until you comply komrad.

        Academics are already working on plans to detain people under mental health laws if they refuse tests or vaccines, so is it a conspiracy theory now? People being forcably detained, locking people up as mentally unstable if they refuse to comply with a government hoax???? See below:

        Extract from “Written evidence from Dr Lisa Forsberg*, Dr Isra Black**, Dr Thomas Douglas*,
        Dr Jonathan Pugh* (COV0220)
        Compulsory vaccination for Covid-19 and human rights law”

        “We set out some provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983 relevant to the grounds on
        80 which a person may be detained—‘sectioned’—under the Act, and the legal basis for
        treatment of detained persons without consent. These are presented for the purposes of
        establishing the mental health parity argument below. This is an illustrative, rather than
        exhaustive, exposition of the law.
        Section 3 of the Mental Health Act permits the detention of an individual in hospital for
        85 treatment provided:
        (a) he is suffering from mental disorder of a nature or degree which makes it
        appropriate for him to receive medical treatment in a hospital; and
        (c) it is necessary for the health or safety of the patient or for the protection of
        other persons that he should receive such treatment and it cannot be provided unless
        90 he is detained under this section15
        (d) appropriate medical treatment is available for him.
        Part IV of the Mental Health Act 1983 governs consent to treatment for patients
        detained under section 3 of the Act. Section 63 of the Mental Health Act 1983 provides
        that the consent of any patient, including those who possess decision-making capacity
        95 under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, ‘shall not be required for any medical treatment
        given to him for the mental disorder from which he is suffering…’. Section 63 of the
        Act is subject to specific and limited exceptions in respect of certain kinds of treatment.16
        The legal regime for treatment without consent under the Mental Health Act 1983
        derogates from the common law requirement that individuals (who are so able) must
        100 give consent in order for medical treatment to be lawful.17
        Mental health law permits the detention of a person for treatment for the
        protection of others, and permits compulsory medical treatment of a person so
        detained.
        3. Compulsory vaccination and human rights law compliance
        105 We focus on the human rights enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights
        (ECHR), since these rights are domestically enforceable in virtue of the Human Rights
        Act 1998 (HRA 1998). The UK is also a party to other international human rights law
        instruments, which we do not treat here.18
        We explain the basis on which a compulsory vaccination measure interferes with ECHR
        110 rights, and advance two parity arguments for why such interference may be justified

        • In Australia, the police have come out against the COVID-19 scam. NSW cops have debunked COVID-19 narrative.
          “A LETTER written by a senior constable from the Coffs/Clarence Highway Patrol in NSW and signed by colleagues has exposed the COVID-19 narrative for its deception and the harm it is causing to police and their relations with the public.”

          It is time for the police to DEFEND the people against those trying to change our freedom into slavery. Like the coup in Russia, it is time to clean the swamp and choose which side you are on for your own families. Unless the police and army defend our liberties against this new invading dogma, they will see the future of their own families destroyed as we become economic slaves. They are using this virus, they may have even created and bribed someone in Wuhan to release it, to terrorize the people into surrendering everything that was fought for by so many generations – FREEDOM. Is this the future we should leave as a legacy to our posterity? They have destroyed businesses intentionally to end commuting. They are determined to end fossil fuels and to make your car obsolete. There have been discussions about using the lockdowns to further meet the climate change goals of reducing fossil fuel use. They are in the process of also creating a major food shortage. I strongly advise stockpiling pasta and rice for the long-term, and canned goods that generally have a two years life span. In the Netherlands, this is even being openly discussed.

          • I keep reading that ‘they’ are planning this that and another – who are ‘they’ and how come they keep their world take over so secret whilst sitting in and underground bunker stroking a white cat?

          • Pasta, rice, lentils, chickpeas, dried peas, beans, flour, yeast, sugar.
            Cans: corned beef, spam, bacon grill, tuna other meat/fish rice pudding fruit, powdered milk.
            Jam, peanut butter lemon juice, olives, vinegar.
            Grow fresh veg when you can, where you can; a south(west) facing veranda will grow salad veg in the summer & spring greens in the winter.
            Cooking oil, dried spices.
            Grow some potatoes in a small garden. A window-cleaner’s bucket will happily host 6 bulbs of garlic.

            With some pulses, oil and spices you can make a dhaal, chapatis with the flour, boil up some rice, you have an easy tasty, nutritious meal.
            Remember, many products only have a “Use by” date because it’s mandatory; many dried products last decades if kept optimally.

          • The police coming out against government restrictions on citizens’ freedoms is the only way to make a bloodless, peaceful overthrow of the government. This is also now happening in Italy. Police officers suddenly realise that their own families are being subjected to authoritarian rule by decree. Why would they not start to say no?

    • It has indeed been tried many times and has always failed. Yet the supposedly Conservative government is treading the same path at an alarming rate.

  2. Get as many kids into further indoctrination…sorry, education, as possible.
    “Of necessity, indoctrination must legitimize itself by dressing itself in the garb of ‘education’ lest we discover that we are being robbed of our ability to think independently by being led to believe that we are thinking independently.”

    • Mind control. Search for MindSpace.com, which is ten years old, and now of course we have the Behavioural Insights Team. The economy is being crashed to enslave every citizen.

  3. Hi Shaun and
    The fact that the Dems look like having a minority in The Senate makes this a difficult question to answer.Same much like the last two years with a President struggling to get his way on many issues like the evironment for example

    • Speaking of the environment, the ENSO is in a La Nina phase, which is expected to last until the spring at least.
      This can cause high pressure blocking patterns, which can last weeks.
      These conditions can cause the weather to get colder and colder, with little wind and short days to generate “renewable” energy.
      (Think “Beast from the East” conditions, where the wind isn’t very strong, but is extremely cold.
      As many are aware, on this website, we do not generate enough electricity by other means, & have to buy in power from abroad, but these conditions can cover all of Western/Northern Europe & they may need all the power they can generate.
      My advice to all of you is, to make sure you have backup heating/cooking facilities which do not require grid power.
      I have a little generator which will power my kerasene central heating & fridge-freezers, three lpg heaters & a propane stove for back up.
      We tend to lose power more easily here than in cities, & have no mains gas, so it may, at first glance seem ott to have so much back-up, but it’s not so daft here.
      Keep yourselves safe.

      • Yes me too! i have a small Honda generator that will run emergency stuff ( most importantly the heating!) plus fully charged batteries and an inverter for short term problems. I gather from your previous posts you live somewhere more remote than me so it makes a lot of sense to have back up.
        Important to keep the wine stock up as well!

          • Good man! I tried that many years ago and made a load of red. I tasted after a couple of years and let’s just say it leaves a lot to be desired!! So I dumped it. But I missed a couple of bottles which I discovered years later. Opened it and it was excellent! It just needed time. So I felt rather foolish having dumped a couple of gallons of what turned out to be great wine.

      • i took a look at gridwatch and we’re back to burning coal again , 2GW worth, or about the same as wind ( 24GW capacity doesnt cut it when the wind doesn’t want to play) .

        we’re even running OCGT too , thats not good, next it;ll be the oil fired gen……..

        forbin

    • Midge, good point and I think we can be a lot more certain the Democrats won’t control of the Senate as the so-called experts were telling us pre-election that they would than that the Democrats will take the White House. It is interesting to analyze the Democratic platform whether Biden wins or not, and I was pleasantly surprised to see that at one time Biden was a big fan of the chained CPI. However, I think Trump still has a good chance of having a second term. The funny maps that show Arizona going for Biden may be wrong when they count all the votes. Win or lose, lots of things about this election have been pure banana republic, from the Pennsylvania Supreme Court judges adding three days to receive mail-in ballots after the election date in Pennsylvania, when the state law clearly says all ballots must be received by election day, to the Pennsylvania ballot counters, with Trump in the lead, knocking off at 1:55 am in the morning to go home and have a rest.

  4. Shaun, the Republicans are going to rediscover ‘sound money and finances’ in the Senate. nothing much is going to get through for the next two years at least.

    • Hi JimW

      Yes there are issues there although I think initially they will let some though on the grounds that they do not want the blame for pandemic related issues. Of course a fair bit of the Presidential election now looks set for the courts and who knows what they will decide?

      Meanwhile back at the Senate

  5. Although I haven’t got good knowledge of the US economy, raising corporation tax and increasing infrastructure spend seems the right path if Bidden wins.

    Nothing is certain yet and its not surprising Trump huffing and puffing he isn’t taking defeat lightly and it seems likely to go to the Supreme Court which is all so very messy but if the votes are against him, he will probably see a further defeat down the line imo.

    The markets seem unnerved about all this at the moment the Dow up yesterday and the UK is bouncing back.

    As to the UK the BOE decision was brought forward and interest rates held by a majority which surprised me.

    I say that because it takes time for interest rates moves to have an effect and I take the view the BOE needs to get ahead of the curve.

    Moreover to the above Sainsburys announced 3,500 jobs to go this morning but not all at once and Caterpillar a further 700 jobs, all this is on top of those thousand of job losses announced yesterday at John Lewis and Lloyds.

    I suppose the BOE has a chance to reconsider their decision in December and also January next year but the longer they leave things the bigger move they may have to make imo.

    Lastly here in the UK the GOV needs to think very hard as to how they can create new jobs, just paying people on furlough for doing nothing is not the answer.

    It may prop up the retail sector on a temporary basis but all this free money will come at a cost in the end.

    • Peter, the government doesn’t create jobs unless they are civil service roles, they tax or borrow money to spend in the economy which has the indirect effect of employing people as long as those payments continue, show me any jobs created by the government that are sustainable or not a drag on the real economy from increased taxation or borrowing.Free enterprise/entrepeneurs create jobs when they start a business or expand an existing one.Governments redistribute the wealth generated in the economy according to their spending policies they do not generate wealth, only tax it and act as a drag on it.

  6. Hello Shaun

    who ever gets in will be again the CEO of the US , that is , Cheif Entermants Officer.

    the power is in the Senate and House , still it would be interesting to see if Biden can acheive anything if he does get to be the POTUS.

    I doubt expantionary monetery policy will be greatly different though …… that’s the Feds job/

    meet the new boss , same as the old boss.

    Forbin

    • Hi Forbin

      The way that the US Dollar is slop-sliding away ( £ above US $1.31 and Euro above 1.18) suggests that markets are expecting more from the Federal Reserve. Tonight’s announcement with its proximity to the election was always going to be a damp squib.

  7. Great blog as usual, Shaun.
    In 2011, as Vice-President under Obama, Biden, much to his credit, became an advocate for the C-CPI-U, or chained CPI for upratings of Social Security payments, as part of a grand bargain with Republicans on reducing the deficit. The 2012 budget actually included such a measure in it, but his boss, President Obama, removed it under pressure from Democrats. The chained CPI was rising slower than the CPI-W and would, without any compensating increase in Social Security payments have lowered the US deficit.
    The CPI-W, like the better known CPI-U, the CPI for the urban population, is a chain Lowe price index with basket updates every two years, and there is substantial upper level substitution bias using such a formula, so that measured inflation will tend to exceed actual inflation. The chained CPI has quarterly rather than annual links, and uses the Törnqvist formula, which, since it satisfies the time reversal property, virtually eliminates upper level substitution bias. It is a pity that the debate on the use of the chained CPI for upratings has centred on deficit reduction versus protecting program recipients, with not much attention paid to the obvious superiority of the chained CPI as a measure of inflation.
    In 2020, Democratic presidential candidate Biden has promised to replace CPI-W for upratings of Social Security, not with the chained CPI, but with CPI-E, a CPI for elderly people. It has all the defects of CPI-U and CPI-W, with an upward bias in its measurement of inflation due to changing its basket only every two years. It will likely, at least for the next few years, lead to higher inflation adjustments than the CPI-W, as health care costs have been rising more rapidly than household costs in general, and elderly people devote more of their household spending to health care. I have no firm opinion about the advisability of a consumer price series for elderly people, except to note that these series have sometimes been abandoned in countries that have used them. Think of the pensioners’ indices in the UK. If a consumer price series for elderly people is adopted for upratings of Social Security, it should be not the existing CPI-E, but a chained CPI-E, with a formula similar to the chained CPI. The sample size of the elderly households in the Consumer Expenditure Survey probably makes a chain Törnqvist index with quarterly links infeasible, so a chained CPI-E would have to use annual links instead. The use of quarterly links in the US chained CPI was likely always a bridge too far, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics should have settled for annual links. The quite similar Swedish CPI uses annual links based on a Walsh formula.
    A chained CPI-E is not what Biden is promising. It would, based on at least one estimate, show virtually the same inflation rate as the CPI-W, the increase in the average inflation rate from changing the target population being almost precisely balanced by the decrease in the average inflation rate from using a superior index formula. Perhaps it is wishful thinking on my part, but if Biden did switch to CPI-E for Social Security upratings, it is possible that either President Biden or President Harris, whoever it is a few years down the road, would want to move to a chained CPI-E for future upratings. The Democrats have very ambitious and expensive green policies planned, and they will have to find the revenues to fund them somewhere.

    • Hi Andrew and thank you

      As to measures for the elderly they do tend to hang around for a while because politicians are aware they tend to vote. So if CPI-E gets started it may hang around for a while.

      As to the chained-CPI how much upwards bias would you say it corrects?

      • Shaun, thank you for your reply and your interest. I erred above in saying that the US chained CPI is quarterly linked. It has monthly links. I apologize for the error. It rather corroborates my point though that it would be very difficult to duplicate the chained CPI formula for a CPI-E, given the limited number of elderly houses in the US CES. I couldn’t find any estimate of the difference between the bias in a C-CPI-U with annual links and one with monthly links flying low, but will keep looking and am quite sure the difference is not great. Over the last five years the difference between the annualized inflation rates of the C-CPI-U and the CPI-U, which I take to be the upper level substitution bias of the CPI-U, is 0.38%, which is a lot when the US has a 2% inflation target.

  8. Hello Shaun,

    Biden’s reaction to this news would be interesting

    “The big public health concern is that any mutation to the coronavirus as it passes between mink and humans might be enough to stop human vaccines working, if and when they become available. Some scientists are now calling for a complete ban on mink production, saying it impedes our response and recovery from the pandemic. ”

    “ferrets, cats, and golden Syrian hamsters can be experimentally infected with the virus and can spread the infection to other animals of the same species in laboratory settings.”

    so not too bad then , er , not so sure . A plague that jumps species then back to us .

    Forbin

    as readers know :-

    People around the world commonly get infected with human coronaviruses

    229E (alpha coronavirus)
    NL63 (alpha coronavirus)
    OC43 (beta coronavirus)
    HKU1 (beta coronavirus)

    now we have these 3

    MERS-CoV (the beta coronavirus that causes Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, or MERS)
    SARS-CoV (the beta coronavirus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS)
    SARS-CoV-2 (the novel coronavirus that causes coronavirus disease 2019, or COVID-19)

    the first two apparently not in circulation any more …

    • Thank you, Forbin. I hadn’t heard anything about this. Lockdown has already closed down the strip clubs. Now it seems there will be no more pictures of beautiful models wearing nothing but stiletto heels and mink coats. How far are we from total civilizational collapse?

    • The police are not your friend (a lesson I learned aged 19) and they are always the last to bite the hand which feeds.
      Similar to the officiers and soldiers “Just following orders.”

  9. Joe Biden’s economic policies are the same as all of those promoted by the other democrats. Just taxing, spending and redistributing wealth from people who work hard to those who are lazy and want handouts.

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