MOAR US stimulus coming

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Via Goldman:

As expected, congressional Democrats released a budget resolution for FY2021 that, once passed, would give them the option to pass coronavirus relief legislation through the reconciliation process with a simple majority in the Senate without Republican support. After President Biden met with moderate Republican senators, the White House quickly signaled its support for passing COVID-relief through the budget reconciliation process. If approved, this would pose upside risk to our $1.1 trillion (5% of GDP) assumption for additional fiscal stimulus.

  • Congressional Democrats this afternoon (Feb. 1) released an FY2021 budget resolution. The resolution itself is a non-binding document, but it would give them the option to pass coronavirus relief legislation through the reconciliation process with only a simple majority in the Senate, i.e., without Republican votes. The key detail in this document is that it instructs the relevant congressional committees to increase the deficit by up to $1.9 trillion, the same amount that President Biden’sAmerican Rescue Plan calls for. This figure, if approved, would set the upper limit on the cost of the next round of legislation.
  • Following a meeting with ten moderate Republican senators (the same number required to pass legislation with the 60-vote bipartisan threshold), the White House quickly signaled that it supports using the budget reconciliation process to pass the next round of coronavirus relief legislation, rather than passing a bill through regular order, which would require bipartisan support.
  • These developments suggest upside risk to our $1.1 trillion assumption for additional fiscal stimulus, though we expect the final number will be lower than the$1.9 trillion envisioned in the budget resolution, for two reasons. First, with very narrow majorities in both chambers of Congress, Democrats need virtually every member to support the resolution and the bill that follows, and some centrist members have raised issues with the White House proposal’s $1.9 trillion cost. Second, Senate rules and precedents regarding reconciliation could pose obstacles to aspects of the proposal, particularly discretionary spending measures that could account for several hundred billion dollars of the Biden proposal that falls in this category.
  • House and Senate Democratic leaders have signaled their intent to pass the budget resolution this week. If they do, this would allow the relevant committees to develop the detailed legislation over the next few weeks, with the expectation of passage later this month or in early March, ahead of the March 14 expiration of enhanced unemployment benefits.

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About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.