šŸŽ™ļø Bidenomics

[5 minutes to read] Evaluating the President's economic plans

Weekend edition

We are 196 days into 2023 ā€” time flies šŸ˜…

And we are 901 days into President Bidenā€™s four-year term (1,461 days.) As the 2024 election cycle looms, it seems like as good a time as any to dive into his administrationā€™s framework for the economy.

Today, we'll discuss what ā€œBidenomicsā€ is, and more, in just 4 minutes to read.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

ā€œEconomists are often asked to predict what the economy is going to do.

But economic predictions require predicting what politicians are going to doā€“ and nothing is more unpredictable.ā€

ā€” Thomas Sowell

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BREAKING DOWN BIDENOMICS

Political plans

Assessing a Presidentā€™s plans and performance is typically fraught with political biases, or, at least, the accusation of them.

And in the chapters of history, most political ambitions, especially those as grandiose as overcoming entrenched bureaucracy to shape an entire nationā€™s economy in 4 or 8 years, will be defined more by the big-picture forces already at work than the specific policies enacted.

Still, itā€™s worth understanding the initiatives being pushed to reflect on the logic behind them and to what extent they accomplish their goals.

For doing so with the current U.S. Presidential administration, thereā€™s perhaps no better person than Jared Bernstein, the head of the White House Council of Economic Advisors.

He went on the Bloomberg Odd Lots podcast recently to discuss President Bidenā€™s economic agenda, aka ā€œBidenomics.ā€

Time to brag?

In fact, his team has been on a campaign touting the successes of Bidenomics at a time when financial markets have been repeatedly surprised by the economyā€™s strength despite rising interest rates.

Itā€™s been a year since gloomy predictions of an impending housing market collapse and surging unemployment became popular. Neither has manifested, while inflation rates have slowed dramatically.

Itā€™s premature to say inflation is fully under control and a recession caused by the Federal Reserveā€™s interest rate hiking campaign has been averted, but some political bragging rights have probably been earned.

Bernstein argues, ā€œI think all of us here in this business get very focused on the news of the dayā€¦you know, the market asset thatā€™s in trouble orā€¦the supply chain thatā€™s broken. But Bidenomics takes both a near-term and a very long-term view.ā€

Bottom-up

It aims to accomplish ā€œbottom up, middle out growth,ā€ what he calls a ā€œcomplete reversal from the trickle-down approachā€ made famous several decades ago.

In that vein, huge pieces of infrastructure legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act and the Chips Act, if implemented correctly, can fundamentally change the economy.

The worry, though, is that these multi-trillion-dollar plans pull future investment forward, limiting how much ā€œammunitionā€ the federal government has to respond to recessions down the road.

Bernstein contends these public initiatives promote long-term private investment, and as he highlights, manufacturing spending on an inflation-adjusted basis is up about 100% compared to the previous administration.

Said differently, America is undergoing a reindustrialization process, particularly in areas like semiconductors (computer chips), electric vehicles and batteries, and clean energy, after many years of outsourcing factory jobs abroad to lower cost-of-labor countries like India and China.

President Biden announced recently that companies have committed over $500 billion toward manufacturing and clean energy projects in the coming years.

Industrial policy

Bernstein continues, saying a national industrial policy has been used since the countryā€™s beginnings with Alexander Hamiltonā€™s manufacturing initiatives.

In recent years, those policies have taken a different shape, where ā€œthe deepest pocketed, best connectedā€ lobbyists manipulate the tax code in their favor, often divorced from what actually boosts economic productivity (the ability to produce more with less.)

As Bernstein sees it, Bidenomics is about creating ā€œthe environment and the conditions both in terms of capital investment, in terms of worker quality, and in terms of ancillary functionsā€¦that workers need to make this all work.ā€

In other words, the goal isnā€™t to tell companies how to run their businesses and zoom in too much on the small details. Rather, itā€™s about addressing market failures where the risk-reward ratios for things like climate change or geopolitical threats in supply chains arenā€™t appreciated in time by private investors.

Economic oxygen

And to do that, says Bernstein, ā€œwe have to make sure that the workforce is empowered and educated.ā€ This is why the administrationā€™s major initiatives ā€” the CHIPS Act and the Inflation Reduction Act ā€” offer worker resources for training and push companies to provide child care when utilizing related subsidies/tax breaks.

Another example of this is what he calls ā€œeconomic oxygen.ā€ That is, ensuring affordable high-speed broadband internet nationwide.

Otherwise, folks in rural America ā€œcanā€™t participateā€ in our modern economy.

International ramifications

Thatā€™s all easier said than done, to be sure. One concern about Bidenomics is that providing advantages to companies investing in U.S. manufacturing comes at, to some extent, the expense of American allies.

Bringing jobs back from China is one thing, but taking them from Europe or Japan doesnā€™t exactly strengthen those relationships. To this, Bernstein comments the U.S. and its allies have a lot of ā€œcommonalityā€ in economic policy. Instead of increasing head-to-head competition, the hope is that there are ā€œspilloverā€ benefits.

He uses an example with electric batteries: Bidenomics may promote battery production in the U.S., but that increased production will boost demand for the many different types of metals that go into batteries, supporting international trade as companies source those inputs from around the world.

Consumers and workers

Ultimately, Bernstein thinks Americans are more than just ā€œconsumers 100%.ā€ In his view, the focus for too long has been on importing as much as possible to fuel consumption at lower prices, pushing production outside of the U.S.

He adds, ā€œYes, we want robust trade flows. Yes, we want to work with our partners to lower the costs of goods that are so critical to our future, but we also want to have good jobs here. And we donā€™t want to hollow out our communities.ā€

Thatā€™s Bidenomics in a nutshell, according to Bernstein. Whether that logic is sound and can work in implementation is up for debate. However, investments in U.S. manufacturing are undoubtedly on the rise, and it at least ā€œfeelsā€ like a big shift is underway.

Dive deeper

For more, listen to Bernsteinā€™s full interview here and this write-up from The Economist.

See you next time!

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