
What a week! Congress finally passed a $1.5 trillion spending plan for the fiscal year that started in October. Today also marks the one-year anniversary of the $1.9 trillion American rescue Plan Act being signed into law by President Joe Biden and the second anniversary of the World Health Organization’s declaration that Covid-19 had become a global pandemic. Here’s what you need to know as we head into the weekend:
Senate Sends $1.5 Trillion Spending Bill, Ukraine Aid to Biden’s Desk
The Senate on Thursday night passed a $1.5 trillion spending package covering the rest of this fiscal year and providing $13.6 billion in aid for Ukraine.
The bipartisan 68-31 vote capped months of delays and sometimes tense negotiations between Democrats and Republicans, with the drama continuing — and tempers occasionally flaring — in recent days as lawmakers pushed to clear the bill before current government funding expires at the end of day Friday.
The omnibus bill, as it’s known, now heads to President Joe Biden’s desk. The Senate also approved a short-term extension of current federal funding, which the House had also passed, giving congressional clerks time to finish processing the larger bill. The White House told reporters Friday that Biden will first sign the stopgap measure, ensuring that government agencies can stay open until the annual funding bill is ready.
The Senate vote on the omnibus funding package came after lawmakers voted down three GOP amendments, including one from Sen. Mike Lee of Utah to defund the administration’s vaccine mandates, another from Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana to add hurricane relief money and a third from Sen. Mike Braun of Indiana to remove earmarks from the spending bill.
Why it matters: The threat of a government shutdown is gone until the end of September, and members of both parties can tout some victories in the final spending package. Democrats secured a nearly 7% increase for non-defense spending — to $730 billion — allowing them to enact their agenda and move beyond domestic spending levels set under former President Donald Trump. Republicans secured an almost equal increase in defense spending, which will total $782 billion.
"This bipartisan funding package represents a robust and unapologetic investment in the American people: it will give our troops a raise, provide more money for schools and Head Start Programs and Pell Grants, reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act, fund the President’s cancer moonshot, and open the floodgates for funding the Bipartisan Infrastructure law," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said. Schumer called it "the strongest, boldest and most significant government funding package we’ve seen in a long time."
The process, however, left plenty of room for complaints — lawmakers had little time to review the 2,741-page bill, for example — and the increases in spending left budget hawks again calling for caps on discretionary spending. And for all the boasting lawmakers have been doing about the spending package, the White House and health care experts are also warning that lawmakers’ failure to approve $15.6 billion more in pandemic funding this week may force the nation’s Covid-response efforts to be cut back.
The $1.9 Trillion American Rescue Plan, One Year Later: Dems Celebrate, Economists Debate
President Biden signed the American Rescue Plan Act into law one year ago today, pushing $1.9 trillion of relief spending and economic stimulus into the U.S. economy in response to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Biden marked the anniversary at a policy retreat Friday. "Few pieces of legislation – no hyperbole – in American history have done more to lift this country out of a crisis than what you did," Biden told lawmakers assembled at the House Democratic Caucus Issues Conference in Philadelphia. "We did it alone, without one single solitary Republican vote," he added. "The American economy was flat on its back. It was the Democrats – it was you – that brought us back."
Retiring House Budget Chairman John Yarmuth (D-KY) also commented on the spending package. "Spearheading this transformative and historic legislation as Chairman of the Budget Committee will remain a highlight of my time here in Congress," he said. "This law saved lives and changed the course of the pandemic and our economic recovery. Because of the American Rescue Plan, we were able to help families stay in their homes and feed their children, help small businesses keep their doors open, ensure communities were not left behind in the recovery, and lay the groundwork for the record-breaking recovery we are experiencing now."
Like many Democrats, Yarmuth credited the law with helping to sharply reduce the unemployment rate while adding 7 million jobs in 2021, and with driving growth rates to multi-decade highs. "Make no mistake – this growth was not inevitable," he said. "Before the American Rescue Plan, our recovery was not projected to reach many these milestones until at least 2024. Clearly, we have made tremendous progress in a short period of time."
A quick look back: The sprawling relief package funded a wide array of programs aimed at every part of the U.S. economy. Another round of direct stimulus payments was included, worth up to $1,400 per person, and additional subsidies for insurance costs helped millions of people keep their health coverage. Enhanced unemployment payments were extended through the end of the summer, providing an extra $300 a week for people who lost their jobs. The child tax credit was expanded, providing direct payments worth as much as $3,600 for younger children, and the earned income tax credit was made more widely available. Schools received $130 billion to help defray the costs of the pandemic, while businesses received over $30 billion to help keep their doors open. About $15 billion went toward Covid-19 testing, while another $15 billion was designated for vaccine development and distribution. And state and local governments received $350 billion, with few strings attached.
A complicated legacy: Most analysts agree that the legislation provided a powerful boost to an economy still feeling the effects of the pandemic, but serious questions remain about whether the spending package was too big.
White House adviser Gene Sperling said the economy is far stronger today thanks to the legislation. "Looking at how resilient and equitable the recovery has been in the face of delta, omicron and now military conflict in Europe, that strategy already looks wise," he told the Associated Press.
But Jason Furman, who led the Council of Economic Advisers in the Obama administration, said the spending package may have backfired by contributing to the current inflationary spiral, souring some lawmakers on the prospects of turning temporary social programs like the enhanced child tax credit into permanent ones, and adding to the challenges of creating many of the new programs that Biden has sought.
"The gamble was it would create a success that would make people want to do more," Furman said. "But it contributed to inflation that made people want to do less. In some ways, that’s the biggest consequence. It was a gamble, and they lost that gamble, and it hurt."
How much inflation? Economists continue to debate just how much the ARP contributed to inflation, which hit 7.9% in February on an annual basis, the biggest increase in consumer prices in 40 years.
On Friday, Biden tied the latest inflation numbers to Covid-driven supply chain issues and the Russian invasion in Ukraine. "Democrats didn’t cause this problem. Vladimir Putin did. Putin’s gas tax has pushed prices higher," Biden said.
But while Russian aggression is no doubt contributing to soaring energy costs worldwide, the broader inflationary trend was well-established before Putin made his move on Ukraine. The question is, how much did the ARP contribute to that trend?
An analysis published by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco last fall argued that the pandemic spending package did indeed contribute to inflation, but at a modest rate of just three-tenths of a percentage point. More recently, Furman estimated that ARP increased inflation by about 2.5 percentage points. Michael Strain, an economist at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, argues for a more substantial effect of 3 percentage points. Notably, none of the estimates find that the spending accounts for even half of the inflation in the economy, though all agree that there has been some kind of effect from the legislation while leaving room for other factors at play.
Politically, the analysis tends to be less subtle, with Republicans arguing that virtually all of the inflation we’re seeing today is a result of what they call excess government spending. On the other side of the aisle, some Democrats have attempted to pin the blame on corporate greed and a long-term lack of investment in the supply side of the economy.
The bottom line: Democrats’ $1.9 trillion pandemic response bill leaves a mixed legacy: faster growth and higher inflation at the same time. The ultimate assessment depends on whether you think it was worth risking more inflation to strengthen what has proved to be a robust — though now troubled —economic recovery.
Mapping $5 Trillion in Covid-19 Relief Spending
As we mark the one-year anniversary of the American Rescue Plan, The New York Times published this graphic summary of where all of the pandemic relief and stimulus spending — totaling roughly $5 trillion — actually went.
"Stimulus bills approved by Congress beginning in 2020 unleashed the largest flood of federal money into the United States economy in recorded history," the Times says. "Economists largely credit these financial jolts with helping the U.S. economy recover more quickly than it otherwise would have from the largest downturn since the Great Depression: The pandemic recession was the shortest on record, lasting only three months."
Still, the Times notes that "the full impact of the spending remains unclear. Some of the money has yet to be distributed. Some of the aid has been criticized as wasteful or has resulted in alleged fraud. And some economists, along with a lot of Republican lawmakers, say the flood of cash has helped fuel inflation."
Chart of the Day: Global Military Budgets at a Glance
Bloomberg Businessweek provides a visual guide to global military budgets over five years. You can click through to see a full-size version, but the big blue circle on the left is the U.S., while the largest red circle on the right is China. Russia and Saudi Arabia are represented by the smaller red circles. (The colors used indicate the country’s level of political rights and civil liberties according to Freedom House, a nonprofit research group.)
News
- McConnell’s $1.5B Phone Call: How Congress Supercharged Its Ukraine Aid Deal – Politico
- Scoop: Bipartisan Lawmakers Push Biden on Aid for Ukraine – Politico
- Congress Just Passed a Massive Spending Bill. Here’s What's In It – Time
- U.S. Bill Sends More Anti-Tank, Anti-Aircraft Arms to Ukraine – Bloomberg
- Covid Response May Have to Be Scaled Back Amid Congressional Inaction, White House Says – Washington Post
- Government Scientists Prep to Slash COVID Research in Funding Gap – Politico
- Biden Relief Plan: Major Victory Gets Mixed One-Year Reviews – Associated Press
- House Dems Are Celebrating the One-Year Anniversary of Their Nearly $2T Covid Aid Victory. Except Things Haven't Gone as Planned Ever Since – Politico
- DNC Sends Cookie Cakes to GOP Governors to Celebrate American Rescue Plan Anniversary – The Hill
- Biden, European Allies Move to Strip Russia of Trade Status – Washington Post
- Dems See Midterm Hope in Biden Bounce – Politico
- House Democrats Want More Executive Actions From Biden – Roll Call
- DOJ Names Chief Prosecutor for Pandemic Fraud Task Force – Politico
- Fed’s Bias for Rate Hikes Over QT Stirs Bond Veterans’ Criticism – Bloomberg
- WHO Is Exploring When and How to Declare End of Covid Emergency – Bloomberg
Views and Analysis
- Americans Are Unhappy With the Economy. Many on the Left Don’t Want to Hear It – Catherine Rampell, Washington Post
- Lies, Damned Lies and Gasoline Prices – Paul Krugman, New York Times
- Manchin’s Energy and Deficit-Reduction Bill Can Fight Inflation — and Russia – Paul Bledsoe and Ben Ritz, The Hill
- Let's Be Serious For Once, Budget Deficits Do Not Cause Inflation – John Tamny, RealClearMarkets
- How Millions of Lives Might Have Been Saved From Covid-19 – Zeynep Tufekci, New York Times
- New Reform Bill Reinforces Authority for Postal Banking – David Dayen, American Prospect
- Are Current Hill Tax Plans Enough to Fund a Scaled-Back Climate and Social Spending Bill? – John Buhl, Tax Policy Center
- Disease Took My Brother. Our Health-Care System Added to His Ordeal – Karen Tumulty, Washington Post
- A Mysteriously Large Chunk of Gen Z Isn't Working – Justin Fox, Bloomberg