This week in Trumponomics: Maybe Bidenomics will be better

President Trump seems to have thrown in the towel on an economic agenda for a second term. He should be hectoring Congress to pass more coronavirus stimulus, but he’s saying practically nothing about it as unemployment worsens and the stock market sags. Trump’s only real economic proposal is a payroll tax cut that will probably never happen, because it would disrupt funding for Medicare and Social Security. Trump railed on China’s trade abuses in 2016, but he’s got little to say about that, either, like maybe he just lost interest.

His Democratic rival Joe Biden, by contrast, has a detailed economic plan, and it’s been getting decent grades by economists assessing how it would impact growth, employment and government deficits. Oxford Economics estimated this week that Biden’s overall plan would boost incomes and create more jobs compared with a baseline in which policy stays the same.

Biden has proposed several large spending programs, along with sizable tax hikes to pay for them. The costliest programs include $1.7 trillion to help more people afford health care over 10 years, $1.4 trillion for primary and secondary education, $775 billion in child and elder care, and $700 billion to invest in buy-America programs, including infrastructure.

Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Wisconsin Aluminum Foundry in Manitowoc, Wis., Monday, Sept. 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Wisconsin Aluminum Foundry in Manitowoc, Wis., Monday, Sept. 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

To pay for all that, Biden would boost the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%, raise individual taxes on families earning more than $400,000 and eliminate some tax breaks for businesses and the wealthy. Biden’s spending proposals add up to about $7 trillion over a decade, while his new taxes would raise about $4 trillion.

No candidate’s plan survives contact with political reality, and some parts of Biden’s plans are implausible, even if Democrats control both houses of Congress. So Oxford assessed a “Biden lite” scenario in which Biden is able to pass about half of his spending and half of his tax hikes into law. In this analysis, about three-quarters of the tax hikes fall upon households earning more than $840,000 per year, doing little to depress consumer spending because the wealthy have plenty of disposable income.

The forecasting firm finds Biden’s plan would raise 2021 real GDP growth from 3.7% to 5.8%, which would be the strongest growth since 1984. The economy would recover from the coronavirus recession by mid-2021, six months faster than it would without such stimulus. By the end of Biden’s term in 2024, the unemployment rate would have plunged to nearly 3%. The federal deficit would widen a bit, but stay in the same range as expected thanks to more tax revenue from more people working.