Yellen defends pandemic spending
16/1/2025 6:16
U.S. Treasury Secretary
Janet Yellen on Wednesday mounted a robust defense of the Biden
administration's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, arguing that
its stimulus spending led to robust growth and averted millions
of job losses.
In her last major speech before leaving office on Monday, Yellen
said the Biden administration's stimulus checks, monthly child
tax credits and enhanced unemployment benefits reduced major
downside risks, and noted that inflation - which spiked around
the world - fell earlier in the U.S. than in other rich
countries.
The U.S. economy did "remarkably well" in the aftermath of
the pandemic and outperformed other advanced economies and did
better than in past recessions, Yellen told members of the New
York Association of Business Economics. The pace of inflation
cooled dramatically as supply disruptions eased, she said.
The Biden administration and Democrats in Congress enacted
the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act in March 2021, after
more than $3 trillion in pandemic spending approved during
President-elect Donald Trump's first administration in 2020.
The actions kept paychecks flowing for idled workers, paid
rent and put thousands of dollars directly into Americans' bank
accounts, fueling sharp increases in consumer spending at a time
when the economy was plagued by pandemic-driven shortages.
Yellen, who last week offered a rare concession that the
stimulus spending may have contributed "a little bit" to
inflation, on Wednesday insisted that it "substantially" offset
the income gaps faced by some 10 million people who lost their
jobs or left the labor force by the end of 2020.
But she said the current higher interest-rate environment meant
the country faced "dire" consequences unless the fiscal deficit
was narrowed.
Pandemic-era spending averted "significant hardship" and
supported demand, which allowed Americans to get back to work
quickly, which in turn helped the U.S. avoid the erosion of
skills and fallout of long-term unemployment, she said.
A policy aimed solely at preventing the post-pandemic surge in
prices without looking at employment consequences would have
resulted in far less or even a contraction in spending, she
said.
Lower spending would likely have led to far lower output
and employment, with potentially millions more people out of
work, households without the income to meet their financial
obligations, and lackluster consumer spending, she said.
Yellen said most researchers agreed a substantial increase
in the unemployment rate would have been needed to keep
inflation at the Federal Reserve's 2% target, possibly as high
as 10% to 14% throughout 2021 and 2022, with an additional 9
million to 15 million people out of work.
The U.S. unemployment rate had until the spring of 2024 been
below 4% for more than two years, an unparalleled streak not
seen since the 1960s. The unemployment rate since 1948 has
averaged about 5.7%.
"Strategies designed to fully suppress the post-pandemic
inflationary surge would have required an exceptionally ... ,
unacceptably high level of unemployment," she said. "The Biden
administration's fiscal policy choices saved millions of jobs."
'MODERN SUPPLY-SIDE ECONOMICS'
Yellen said the U.S. economy was doing well now, with solid
growth, low inflation and a strong labor market, but more work
was needed to address adverse structural trends that made it
difficult for many families to achieve a middle-class life.
The former Fed chief has championed what she calls "modern
supply-side economics," which rejects the idea that deregulation
and tax cuts for the rich will fuel broader economic growth, and
focuses instead on investments in infrastructure, the labor
force and research and development.
Those ideas will be tested as President-elect
Donald Trump
returns to the White House for a second term on Monday,
given his vow to cut taxes, impose tariffs on imports and reduce
the size of government.
Yellen urged U.S. policymakers to sustain infrastructure
investments and tax credits aimed at encouraging investments in
clean energy, warning of threats to communities across the
country and the stalling of work to tackle climate change.
Big efforts were also needed to reduce the U.S. fiscal
deficit, now at a historical high of 6.4% of gross domestic
product, and facing big challenges given the need for pension
payments and health care for the aging population, she said.
"The projected fiscal path under current budgetary policies
is simply not sustainable, and the consequences of inaction, or
action that exacerbates projected deficits, could be dire," she
said, noting Congress had rejected President Joe Biden's plans
to cut the deficit by raising taxes on the wealthiest Americans.
Yellen said the Congressional Budget Office estimated that
extending the provisions of the Trump-era Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
that are scheduled to sunset next year would add around $4
trillion to deficits through 2034, and Treasury estimated the
cost could swell to more than $5 trillion through 2035 if some
proposed other measures were adopted.
"Such policies could undermine our country's strength, from
the resilience of the Treasury market to the value of the
dollar, even provoking a debt crisis in the future," she said.
In her prepared remarks, Yellen also warned the Trump
administration against ending efforts to modernize the Internal
Revenue Service, arguing that it would jeopardize estimated
revenue of $851 billion over the next decade.
She did not comment on Trump's plans to create a new
External Revenue Service
agency to collect tariffs, duties, and other revenue from
foreign sources.
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