Biden funded new factories and infrastructure projects, but Trump might
get to cut the ribbons
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[November 12, 2024] By
JOSH BOAK and ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — All that's left is for President-elect Donald Trump to
put his name on it — if he wants.
Trump won the White House in large part because of voters' frustration
with high prices and a sense that the United States needs major changes.
But when he enters office in January, Trump will inherit an economy
primed for growth.
The unemployment rate is low, inflation is easing and President Joe
Biden's administration has teed-up a ready-made list of infrastructure
projects that could go from theoretical to reality over the next several
years. There’s the TSMC computer chip plant in Arizona, the new Hyundai
electric vehicle factory in Georgia and a modernized I-375 in Michigan,
among thousands of projects under way that will take years to complete.
All of that means it could be Trump, rather than Biden, who gets to tell
Americans that he built the country back better. If he decides to let
the projects proceed, that is.
Biden, himself, acknowledged last week that the positive economic
impacts from his policies would occur after his term ends in January.
“Much of the work we’ve done is already being felt by the American
people, but the vast majority will not be felt, will be felt over the
next 10 years,” he said in remarks in the Rose Garden. “It’s going to
take time, but it’s there. The road ahead is clear.”
Trump wants to reverse Biden's policies, but construction is already
ongoing
While Trump on the campaign trail railed against Biden's record, he has
offered few details on what initiatives he might scrap. Trump said in
September that he would “rescind all unspent funds under the misnamed
Inflation Reduction Act ” and said on Joe Rogan’s podcast that tariffs
would do more for manufacturing than the funding provided by the CHIPS
and Science Act.
But Biden aides privately told The Associated Press that they expect
Trump to continue the planned projects and take credit for Biden's
accomplishments, just like the Republicans in Congress who’ve celebrated
plant openings and infrastructure developments in their districts but
voted against them.
The administration has spent millions of dollars to put up road signs to
promote Biden's role in the projects; all Trump would need to do is
re-label them with his own name. Biden aides feel confident that Trump
won’t want to cut programs that are helping states he won in this year’s
election even if Republicans try for a token repeal of some provisions
in order to help fund some of their own tax cut plans.
When asked about this possibility, Karoline Leavitt, spokeswoman for the
Trump-Vance transition, said: “The American people re-elected President
Trump by a resounding margin giving him a mandate to implement the
promises he made on the campaign trail. He will deliver.”
Natalie Quillian, a deputy chief of staff for Biden's White House, said
that the administration's programs are already starting to make a
positive difference for the economy.
“We have already announced investments for 70,000 infrastructure and
clean energy projects, catalyzed nearly $1 trillion in private sector
investment, lowered prescription drug prices, and created 1.6 million
construction and manufacturing jobs,” she said. "Over the coming months,
we will continue to run through the tape and ensure Americans benefit
from this president’s agenda for years to come.”
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Then Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump
speaks at the Bitcoin 2024 Conference on July 27, 2024, in
Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)
Trump is entering the White House
as the economy is improving
Trump is also inheriting by many measures an increasingly healthy
economy, despite his claims that conditions are miserable.
The Republican won the election with the
unemployment rate at a healthy 4.1%, inflation at 2.4% and the
Federal Reserve cutting its benchmark rates in ways that could
support additional growth. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
summarized the situation last week by saying the economy is “strong
overall.”
Voters, though, felt the economy was weak. They penalized Democrats
for inflation that reflected supply chain challenges after the
pandemic, the impact of government aid that also energized job
growth and Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine causing spikes in
energy and food prices.
Voters appeared to care less about the overall rate of inflation,
though, than the changes in price levels that occurred over the past
four years. Nearly 9 in 10 identified inflation as an important
factor for their choice in this year’s election, with Trump winning
the clear majority of this group, according to AP VoteCast, an
extensive survey of more than 120,000 voters.
Still, economists who’ve advised and worked previously with Trump
felt the economy was not as solid as the top line numbers suggest.
They stressed the high level of government debt that has been
driving growth, even though Trump himself showed little appetite for
cutting deficits during his previous time in the White House.
“Government spending is keeping the economy afloat," said Joseph
LaVorgna, who was the chief economist of White House National
Economic Council during Trump’s presidency.
LaVorgna also noted that much of the recent job growth has come from
government and health care hiring, instead of from manufacturing and
other for-profit sectors.
Possible pressure to embrace renewable energy and EVs
There is a recognition among some Republican lawmakers that the
energy tax credits that were part of the Inflation Reduction Act
were positives and should be preserved. Eighteen GOP House members
sent House Speaker Mike Johnson a letter in August asking him to
preserve the tax credits.
Economists supporting Trump also note that sales growth for EVs
could jump under the incoming administration, which has the support
of Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
Trump has wanted to remove Biden's incentives for EVs, which are
part of the Inflation Reduction Act. But after getting Musk's
backing, Trump said that he's "for electric cars ... because Elon
endorsed me very strongly.”
That simple shift of Trump talking up EVs could remove politics from
the issue and cause the incoming president to fulfill a goal set by
Biden, said economist Stephen Moore, an informal Trump adviser and
economist at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.
“With Biden gone, the EV industry will make a comeback,” Moore said.
“Biden made EVs toxic because half the country hated Biden, half
loved him. The people who hated Biden wouldn’t buy an EV out of
conscience.”
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