Wednesday, February 22, 2023

Fwd: The Morning: Biden’s economic record



---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: The New York Times <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
Date: Wed, Feb 22, 2023 at 3:46 AM
Subject: The Morning: Biden's economic record
To: <steve.scott.ceo@gmail.com>


Two failures, three successes, a few uncertainties.

Good morning. As Biden's economic team turns over, we look at its successes and failures over the first two years.

Brian DeeseTom Brenner for The New York Times

An exit interview

President Biden's economic team is turning over. Brian Deese, the top adviser in the West Wing, left his job this week, and Cecilia Rouse, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, will soon return to her faculty post at Princeton.

I want to use the transition to think about Biden's biggest economic successes and failures so far, as well as some big uncertainties. As part of that exercise, I sat down with Deese to conduct an exit interview, and you'll read quotes from it below.

In the interest of accountability, let's start with what I see as the administration's biggest disappointments.

Two failures

Inflation. After decades of low inflation, Biden and his team erred on the side of a large Covid stimulus plan in 2021. They were more worried about the economy being too weak, as it has been for much of the 21st century, than being so strong that prices spiked. They were at least partly wrong.

The chart below captures the administration's mistake — but also its somewhat limited consequences. Inflation in the U.S. was initially higher than in similar countries, but only modestly so and not anymore. That pattern suggests that the Biden bill did aggravate inflation, but the stimulus wasn't the biggest problem.

Source: St. Louis Fed | By The New York Times

The bigger problems were the supply chain disruptions caused by Covid and the energy price increases caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

When I gave Deese a chance either to defend the size of the stimulus plan or acknowledge that it was too big, he did neither and simply said, "It was the right thing to do."

The "care economy." Biden came into office calling for universal pre-K, paid family leave and an expansion of elder care. But he could not rally enough congressional support despite the policies' popularity in polls. The failure seems to stem partly from the administration's lack of focus on the so-called care economy: It was one item on a long list of Biden's priorities.

Barack Obama was able to pass an expansion of health care partly because he made clear that the bill was his top priority. A future administration may need to do the same to make the care economy a reality. It's also an area that would benefit from more policy design work by outside experts, Deese said.

One policy that Biden did pass was a large expansion of the child tax credit, and it led to a sharp decline in child poverty. Nevertheless, Congress let the expansion expire. A lesson: For a policy to become too popular to end, it probably needs to exist for several years.

Cecilia RouseKriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times

Three successes

The Covid recovery. Deese named "a strong and equitable economic recovery" as Biden's top economic accomplishment. The unemployment rate is at the lowest level since 1969, and wage increases have been larger for lower-income workers than higher earners. Black unemployment often takes more than four years to recover from a recession, Deese said. This time, it took two years.

The stimulus plan deserves criticism for aggravating inflation, but it also some credit for the vigorous recovery.

Investment. Biden can't claim any one victory as large as Obamacare, but the scope of his legislation is impressive. It includes bills to reduce medical costs; rebuild bridges, highways and other infrastructure; and expand broadband internet service, public transportation and the nation's semiconductor sector.

"In terms of magnitude, you have to go back to the '50s and early '60s to find a similar approach," Deese said, referring to infrastructure. He is particularly hopeful, he said, that those investments will spark investments by private companies. Already, Intel and Micron are planning semiconductor factories in response.

Climate. Close readers may have noticed that the above list of investments left off one category: clean energy. I think it is important enough to highlight. Given the extreme costs and dangers of climate change, Biden's investments to accelerate the transition away from greenhouse gases may end up being the most important part of his economic legacy.

A few uncertainties

Antitrust. Along with a strong recovery and a surge of investment, Deese named Biden's focus on competition and antitrust as one of his three biggest economic accomplishments. The competition policy includes a new skepticism toward mergers; a crackdown on "junk fees"; and the approval of over-the-counter hearing aids. "It's been decades or more since you've had a president who was this forward leaning," Deese said.

That's true and significant. Even so, it remains unclear whether Biden's policies will lead to a meaningful reduction in corporate concentration.

Collective bargaining. Biden vowed to be the most pro-union president in history. But like other recent Democratic presidents, he failed to pass a bill that would make it easier for workers to join unions. Still, Deese argues that Biden's full-throated support for organized labor has contributed to a renewed understanding of the benefits of unions.

We'll see: Public approval of unions is at a 50-year high, but the share of workers belonging to one declined again last year.

Red tape. Some supporters of Biden's investment program worry that it will prove disappointing because major construction projects are so expensive and bureaucratically fraught in the U.S. (A recent Ezra Klein Show described the problem in detail.) Deese insists that the White House is working on solutions. "We can do things differently," he said.

Related: You can read the transcript of my conversation with Deese. He has been replaced by Lael Brainard, a former Federal Reserve official, while Biden will nominate Jared Bernstein, one of Rouse's deputies, to replace her.

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Ilulissat, Greenland.Carsten Snejbjerg for The New York Times

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Matthew Cullen, Lauren Hard, Lauren Jackson, Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Sunday, February 19, 2023

Fwd: The Morning: Aging societies





On Feb 19, 2023, at 4:49 AM, The New York Times <nytdirect@nytimes.com> wrote:
Asia's population is shrinking faster than any other continent's.

Good morning. Countries in Asia are aging rapidly. Motoko Rich, The Times's Tokyo bureau chief, explains what that means for society.

Seniors lining up for food aid vouchers in Hong Kong. Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times

Senior societies

Asia faces a problem: Its population is aging faster than any other continent's. A growing percentage of people in Japan, South Korea and China are over 65, and those countries' economies are suffering because of a lack of available workers. Governments are struggling to find the money to support retirees.

The problem is pronounced in Japan. I spoke to Motoko Rich, The Times's Tokyo bureau chief, about what it means when a society ages this quickly.

Claire: You've reported on the rapidly graying populations of Japan and other Asian countries. How much is Asia aging, and how did we get here?

Motoko: Let's start with Japan. Almost a third of the population is over 65. For comparison, in the U.S. that number is about 17 percent. And experts say South Korea and China are on track to reach similar levels in the coming years.

Source: United Nations Population Division

One reason is the low birthrates in these countries. In China, it was because of the one-child policy. In Japan and Korea, gender inequality and the high cost of raising children played important roles. Because of high expectations at home, it's hard for women to combine parenting with having a fulfilling career. As a result, more women are postponing childbirth or deciding not to have children at all.

Life expectancy is also long in these countries. Looking from afar, there are some jolly aspects to that, like happy centenarians who are living healthy lives on the Japanese island of Okinawa. But there's a dark side. Japan has the highest percentage of old people with dementia. And there are not enough workers to take care of them and even to fill the jobs to run the economy.

I understand why an aging population poses challenges within a country. What does it mean for people living elsewhere?

It's coming for you. Population growth in the U.S. is at extremely low levels. Italy's population is aging at the fastest rate in the West. Other countries will look toward Asia and learn from it. They'll see what to do or what not to do.

You can compare the issue to how people used to view climate change: It was happening for many years, but we weren't paying attention. Societies need to plan for aging, and they're not well set up to do so. It's not an in-your-face crisis — it's a slow-rolling crisis.

Older people in Asia are often in good physical health. What about their mental health?

Mental health is a huge problem. Some people die alone, as my colleague Norimitsu Onishi wrote a few years ago. People have fewer children than they used to. Those children move to cities, and are not in a position to take care of their parents who are left behind in depopulating areas. So old people are living in isolation.

Other than older people working longer, what are some potential solutions?

Bringing in workers from other countries seems to be the only solution, but Japan is notoriously opposed to immigration. A few years ago it changed its laws to allow some workers, but the parameters were strict and it didn't have a major impact.

Japan is not the only country in the region struggling with this. Last year in China, deaths outnumbered births for the first time in six decades. How is China dealing with its aging population?

China has been scrambling to forestall the decline by ending its one-child policy and encouraging families to have more children, including — like in Japan — the subsidizing of assisted reproductive technology, in the hopes that it will spur more births.

You recently wrote a story about older people in Tokyo working manual jobs. How did you get that idea?

I wanted to do the story because I see it everywhere. A few years into living here, I hired movers. When they showed up, they looked like grandparents. My husband and I kept offering to help — they seemed way too old to be doing this kind of labor. When you open the door for a delivery, often the person looks too old to still be working.

If you go into the post office or banks, there'll often be a selection of reading glasses at the counter. There are also little nooks where people can hang their canes. In train stations, there's more seating for older people, but also more old people nimbly climbing the stairs than I was used to seeing in New York. It's very clearly an older society.

Motoko Rich is The Times's Tokyo bureau chief. Her first front-page story from Japan was about the middle-aged dissolution of a beloved boy band.

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Making Eggplant Parmesan — as well as iterations with chicken, pork, mushrooms and other options — often takes a lot of time. That's why Emily Weinstein recommends this eggplant Parmesan pasta, which can easily be made on a weeknight. Combine it with these other four delicious recipes.

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Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times.

Lauren Hard, Lauren Jackson, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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