Forty-eight months and 21%. As President Joe Biden arms off stewardship of the U.S. economic system to Donald Trump, these two numbers describe how Biden’s financial legacy is seen.
Forty-eight is the variety of consecutive months American jobs grew under Biden, the whole thing of his tenure, from January 2021 by December 2024. The feat is extraordinary, making Biden the one president going again to at the very least 1939 to do that. (There have been two different presidential phrases the place this occurred, Barack Obama’s and Ronald Reagan’s, however they adopted first phrases that noticed recessions with month-to-month job losses.)
The 21% is how a lot the Consumer Price Index rose during Biden’s term, virtually triple the tempo of Trump’s first time period and peaking with an annual inflation fee of greater than 9% in mid-2022. That peak gave Biden the doubtful distinction of seeing the quickest fee of rising costs since Reagan, a significant factor in Trump’s victory in November.
“Broadly talking, the economic system is in a reasonably good place,” mentioned Mark Zandi, chief economist with Moody’s Analytics. “If nothing messes it up, there’s no shocks, there’s no coverage errors, it ought to be advantageous for the foreseeable future.”
The temptation to mess it up could also be too sturdy to withstand for Trump, who takes workplace on Monday and will begin implementing his tariff agenda virtually instantly. Trump efficiently ran on the concept the economic system below Biden was uniquely horrible, and the general public agreed: 68% of voters mentioned the economic system was both “not so good” or “poor.”
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, in a ready speech Wednesday in New York Metropolis, mentioned the economic system had carried out “remarkably nicely” within the wake of the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and challenged those that questioned the alternatives the Biden administration made.
“All coverage selections entail trade-offs, however the Biden administration made sound selections that set the economic system on a powerful course,” she mentioned.
On paper, there’s a lot for the Biden administration to crow about:
Even a Biden critic, Veronique de Rugy, senior analysis fellow with the libertarian Mercatus Middle, had some compliments for his financial report.
“For my part, the economic system below Biden was good. It’s not as if unemployment was excessive,” she mentioned.
However that report must be checked out within the context of different issues, she mentioned.
“Purple tape, debt and inflation,” de Rugy mentioned. “The economic system was actually sturdy as a result of it was fueled by, I imply, an insane amount of cash. But it surely was additionally affected by inflation, and that’s not good for folks.”
Yellen in her speech defended the selection to behave aggressively by spending to revive the economic system, mentioning how a lot quicker and stronger the U.S. economic system recovered from the pandemic shock than its worldwide rivals, noting the economic system grew by 11.5% within the U.S., higher than some other member of the Group of Seven, the world’s largest developed economies.
Yellen’s protection additionally centered on one other query: What if the administration had taken a extra cautious however cheaper method so as to hold inflation low? She mentioned the prices would have been great.
Preserving inflation to the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal would have meant letting joblessness rise as excessive as 10% to 14% in 2021 and 2022, the primary two years Biden was in workplace.
“That will have meant an extra 9 to fifteen million folks out of labor,” she mentioned.
The incoming Trump administration has already signaled it intends to take a distinct course. But it surely’s unclear whether or not these plans will additional sluggish inflation or inflame it.
Scott Bessent, Trump’s choose to be Yellen’s successor, in his testimony Thursday earlier than the Senate Finance Committee, once more touted his “3-3-3” plan. It requires 3% annual financial progress, chopping annual finances deficits in half to three% of the dimensions of the general economic system and producing 3 million extra barrels of oil a 12 months to deliver vitality costs down.
Trump has touted elevated vitality manufacturing as a technique to deliver down costs, although that might solely be true to the extent the worth of or service was energy-dependent and the vendor was keen to go these financial savings on to the buyer.
The three% financial progress goal might not be an issue. The economic system grew at 3.0% and three.1% within the second and third quarters of this 12 months, and the Atlanta Federal Reserve Financial institution’s gross home product-tracking GDPNow projection pegged the fourth quarter at 3% as nicely on Friday.
However trimming the deficit in half can be tough. The nonpartisan Congressional Price range Workplace mentioned Friday it expects the deficit for 2025 to be close to 2024’s, at $1.865 trillion. Slicing that in half would require spending cuts, tax hikes or a mixture of each totaling at the very least $900 billion, a tricky promote with out chopping politically widespread packages or enacting unpopular tax will increase.
However Zandi was most skeptical of the elevated oil manufacturing goal within the 3-3-3 plan.
“I don’t perceive the technique in any respect as a result of what issues when it comes to extra exploration, growth and funding within the fossil gasoline business is increased costs. They’re not going to take a position in any other case,” he mentioned.
“For them, it’s the worth of oil. And should you inform them, ‘Pump extra so we get oil costs down,’ that doesn’t compute.”
There could also be indicators that oil firms are content material with current record production levels. On Jan. 8, the Division of the Inside mentioned there have been no bidders for an oil and gas lease sale in Alaska’s Arctic Refuge. A earlier sale yielded solely $14.4 million in bids. Collectively the 2 gross sales, required by the 2017 tax lower invoice, have been alleged to generate $2 billion over 10 years, the Inside Division mentioned.
Mercatus’ de Rugy mentioned there was loads of room for Trump to alter course with out endangering the economic system, with one situation.
“Truly, I believe there’s so much to do. There’s loads of rocking the boat to do, nevertheless it must be issues that decrease costs,” she mentioned.
Although de Rugy mentioned she didn’t worry broad tariffs would end in increased inflation, many economists disagree, and Trump’s plans for tightening immigration and preserving and broadening tax cuts run that danger as nicely.
Zandi mentioned the incoming financial policymakers ought to be cautious about making massive modifications until they’re very positive they received’t hurt the economic system and can end in extra jobs and earnings. However he anticipated modifications anyway.
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“I’m skeptical and I doubt it,” he mentioned of whether or not lots of Trump’s touted plans would meet that bar, “nevertheless it appears like we’re going to go down the trail anyway.”