Plus, Biden's new Covid czar
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [The Fisc]( Â Â By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey Happy Monday! Itâs [National Pet Day]( Hereâs what else is going on: (iStockphoto/The Fiscal Times) White House Braces for Another âExtraordinarily Elevatedâ Inflation Report
The inflation rate hit a multi-decade high of 7.9% in February and now the Biden administration is warning that the March numbers could be even worse. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that tomorrowâs Labor Department report on the consumer price index is expected to show another round of price increases in the U.S. economy, driven in part by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. âWe expect March CPI headline inflation to be extraordinarily elevated due to Putinâs price hike,â Psaki told reporters. At the same time, the White House expects the measure of core inflation, which excludes volatile categories such as oil and grains, to be lower. âWe expect a large difference between core and headline inflation,â Psaki continued, âreflecting the global disruptions in energy and food markets.â All in the details: Axiosâs Neil Irwin [says]( that beyond what could be a ânastyâ headline number, the report will give an indication of whether the inflationary pressures in the economy are starting to ease. âThe real question for the outlook lies in what is going on with underlying inflation trends â those tied to the economy's internal dynamics around wages and business pricing power, rather than geopolitical events,â Irwin writes. Some analysts expect to see reduced pressure on the prices of goods, which have been driving inflation in recent months. Used car prices, which have played a powerful role in driving overall inflation higher, saw a drop at the end of March. But prices for services are rising and could take over as the main driver of sustained inflation. Expectations rising: The consumer outlook for inflation rose to a new high in March, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Consumers expect to see inflation of 6.6% on an annual basis, up six-tenths of a point from the month before. âThe increase in short-term expectations was broad-based across age, education, and income groups,â [says]( Bloombergâs Alexandre Tanzi. âInflation also pushed the one-year outlook for household spending and rent growth to new highs in data going back to 2013.â Economists surveyed by Bloomberg see inflation moving even higher, with an average expectation of 8.4% for March. Recession risk rising, too: The stubborn persistence of inflation is pushing the Federal Reserve to move more aggressively, and the central bank has started raising rates and will start draining liquidity from the economy in the coming weeks. Tighter monetary conditions are reducing growth estimates, and economists surveyed by [The Wall Street Journal]( raised their odds of a recession occurring in the next year to 28%, up sharply from 13% a year ago. âRisk of a recession is rising due to the series of supply shocks cascading throughout the economy as the Fed lifts rates to address inflation,â Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM, told the Journal. Some economists are much more pessimistic. Amy Crews Cutts of AC Cutts & Associates puts the odds of a recession at 70%. âTo be seen not fighting it is politically unwinnable,â she told the Journal. âBut the only policy response the Fed has is to tighten. Fed actions to curb inflation will lead to a recession sooner rather than later.â A fiscal factor: High inflation is already playing a significant role in congressional debate over the defense budget, as The Hillâs Jordan Williams [writes](. The Biden administration has asked for a Pentagon budget of $773 billion for fiscal year 2023, a 4% increase over this yearâs level. Republicans have criticized the request for failing to keep up with inflation, warning that the militaryâs purchasing power will be eroded â and have called for an increase of 5% above inflation. But some liberals have argued that some defense contractors are using inflation as a cover to push their own price hikes. âI think that the $773 billion for the Pentagon is already way too high, but the notion that we need to increase the total by $100 or $400 billion every year just invites defense contractors to pick taxpayersâ pockets,â Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) said last week at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Armed Services. âThe American people are willing to pay to defend this country, but they're not going to sit still for being gouged by hugely profitable defense companies.â New Coronavirus Czar: $10 Billion Is Just a âDown Paymentâ for Pandemic Funding
Dr. Ashish Jha took over Monday as the White House coronavirus response coordinator, replacing Jeff Zients. Jha, appointed by President Biden last month, started his tenure by making the rounds of morning television news shows, saying heâs ânot overly concernedâ about the BA.2 omicron subvariant and the increase in cases some regions are now seeing. Jha said that infection rates are still low relative to where they have been and hospitalizations â âthe metric we care about mostâ â are at their lowest level since the start of the pandemic. âThe pandemic isnât over. Weâre still going to see cases of this virus spreading, and we have to continue to be vigilant, we have to continue to be careful,â Jha said on ABCâs [âGood Morning America.â]( He added that the vaccines and boosters are working well against the BA.2 subvariant and said it is âabsolutely essentialâ that every adult who is more than five months from vaccination get their booster shot, and especially important for older Americans. âThatâs how weâre going to save lives, thatâs how weâre going to prevent hospitalizations and deaths â is making sure that older, more vulnerable people absolutely get their booster,â he said. A down payment on pandemic funding needs? Jha [told CBS]( that heâs confident Congress will âstep up and do its partâ by delivering additional pandemic funding â money that the White House has said is urgently needed to continue providing vaccines, treatments and testing. Congress has so far failed to approve that funding, as a bipartisan bill to provide $10 billion got delayed in the Senate last week after Republicans demanded a vote on an amendment to extend a pandemic-era border policy that the Biden administration has said it will end next month. Jha called the $10 billion a down payment on needed funding, noting that the administration had previously asked for $22.5 billion or more. âWe need it for vaccines, we need to make sure that we have plenty of testing available, we need to make sure that we have plenty of treatments available,â Jha said. âThatâs all going to be essential, and weâre going to need the resources to make sure that we have that for the American people.â Jha also said that the Biden administration may extend the federal mask mandate for public transportation, which is currently set to expire on April 18. âThis is a CDC decision and I think it is absolutely on the table,â he told [NBCâs âToday Show.â]( Why it matters: Jhaâs appointment to the White House job was questioned by some skeptics who pointed out that he has never had a leadership role in government and doesnât have experience managing the federal bureaucracy or handling the politics and public scrutiny that inevitably come with such a job. While serving as the White House Covid czar, heâs on leave from his position as dean of the Brown University School of Public Health. âNow, the amiable academic faces a real-world test of his pithy TV advice: If the government fails to secure enough vaccines and tests, forcing Americans into long waits, itâs his problem. If a new variant causes a sixth pandemic wave, or besieged hospitals cannot handle an avalanche of cases, those are his problems, too, and ones that canât be explained away in a cable-news segment,â The Washington Postâs Dan Diamond wrote in a [profile]( published this weekend. Jhaâs defenders say heâs the right person for the job because he brings health and policy expertise along with messaging skills. âThree administration officials working on the coronavirus response agreed Jhaâs background as a public health expert and physician would allow him to foresee some challenges his predecessor missed,â Diamond reported. The bottom line: The real test for Jha wonât be on morning news shows. --------------------------------------------------------------- Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. And please encourage your friends to [sign up here]( for their own copy of this newsletter.
--------------------------------------------------------------- News - [The New White House Rule: Do Not Talk About Joe Manchin]( â Politico
- [Larry Summers Calls for Increasing Revenue, but Rejects 'Billionaire's Tax']( â Meet the Press (video)
- [U.S. Economy Now âFacing Rocky Waters,â Biden Aide Deese Says]( â Bloomberg
- [Inflation Emerges as Key Debate in Defense Spending]( â The Hill
- [Poll: In Economic Views, Inflation Outweighs Jobs]( â CBS News
- [Inflation Is Hammering the Voters Who Will Soon Decide Some Key Midterm Races]( â CNBC
- [U.S. Inflation May Peak in March, but Itâs a Slow Go to Fedâs 2%]( â Bloomberg
- [U.S. Pump Prices Ride Longest Streak of Declines Since 2020]( â Bloomberg
- [With COVID Mission Over, Pentagon Plans for Next Pandemic]( â Associated Press
- [Efforts to Make Protective Medical Gear in US Falling Flat]( â Associated Press
- [Thereâs a Growing Interest in Wealth Taxes on the Super-Rich. Hereâs Why It Hasnât Happened]( â CNBC
- [Harris Says White House Will Seek to Ease Americans' Medical Debt Burden]( â CNN
- [Democrats Weighed Down by Biden Scramble for Message]( â The Hill
- [The Next Leap in Coronavirus Vaccine Development Could Be a Nasal Spray]( â Washington Post
- [A Sour and Angry America Poised to Punish Dems This Fall]( â Politico
- [Oligarchâs Big Loophole for Stashing Money]( â Politico Views and Analysis - [Get Ready for a Nasty Inflation Report]( â Neil Irwin, Axios
- [Republicans Need to Tell Voters What Their Plans Are]( â Ramesh Ponnuru, Bloomberg
- [Democrats Need to Call Out the Corporations That Stalled Build Back Better]( â Sarah Miller, New Republic
- [The American Rescue Planâs Child Care Test Run]( â Bryce Covert, American Prospect
- [How to Break Out From the Great Stagnation]( â Adrian Wooldridge, Bloomberg
- [Student Loan Forgiveness Is an Idea Whose Time Has Gone]( â Matthew Yglesias, Bloomberg
- [Biden Finally Moves to Fix One of Obamacareâs Most Glaring Problems]( â Washington Post Editorial Board
- [Donât Call for More Defense Spending Based on Past Practices]( â Harlan Ullman, The Hill
- [Congress Protected Patients by Banning Surprise Bills â Attempts to Weaken the Law Shouldnât Stand]( â Reps. Bobby Scott (D-VA) and Virginia Foxx (R-NC), The Hill
- [The Media Is Failing the Public on the Good News About Jobs]( â Margaret Sullivan, Washington Post
- [Paul Krugman on Why the Economy Is Doing Better Than We Think]( â Kara Swisher and Paul Krugman, New York Times (podcast) Copyright © 2020 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed at our website or through Facebook.
The Fiscal Times, 399 Park Avenue, 14th Floor, New York, NY 10022, United States
Want to change how you receive these emails? [Update your preferences]( or [unsubscribe](