By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Biden Has To Show An Industrial Strategy
President Joe Biden
has placed his economic record at the heart of his reelection bid. His State of
the Union address in March emphasized the achievements of his administration.
“I inherited an economy that was on the brink,” he said. “Now our economy is
the envy of the world.” Even though polls show that many Americans are
skeptical of such a claim, the data suggest that the U.S. economy is in good
shape. Unemployment remains low at 3.9 percent, inflation is down to 3.5
percent from its peak of 9.1 percent in June 2022, and consumer spending is
growing robustly even as GDP growth has slowed from its more frenetic pace in
2023.
Biden can point to
several pieces of legislation passed during his tenure that help account for
this relative success. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the CHIPS and Science
Act (CHIPS), and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill are at least partially responsible
for recent gains, leading to public investment totaling about $537 billion and
spurring investment commitments from the private sector that are estimated at
$866 billion and expected to grow into the trillions, with investment in
manufacturing adding about 0.4 percent to GDP last year. This wave of public
funding comes at a time when the British and other European governments
continue to flirt with austerity even as their economic performance lags behind
that of the United States. Biden’s large-scale investments in industrial policy
mark a departure from previous administrations and have triggered a sea change
in both domestic and global policy debates.
But notwithstanding
the statistics, many Americans continue to feel that the economy is not working
for them. Abiding structural weaknesses, including weak labor laws,
underinvestment in accessible education and health care, high rates of
indebtedness, and rising income and wealth inequality, mean that most Americans
are not experiencing the gains of the current recovery. Citing abstract numbers
to persuade a public that is still pinching pennies will do little to win over
skeptical voters who do not trust that the system is working for them.
To convince Americans
that a second term will allow them to reap the full benefits of Biden’s new
industrial policy, the administration must make progress on implementing the
structural reforms needed to truly expand the U.S. economy from the “middle out
and bottom up,” as the White House described its economic ambition in June
2023. This will require a much broader and bolder approach—one that doesn’t shy
away from arresting the heavy financialization of the country’s corporate
sector.
U.S. President Joe
Biden at a new semiconductor manufacturing facility in New Albany, Ohio,
September 2022
The Return Of Industrial Policy
Since coming into
office in 2021, the Biden administration has pursued an agenda of economic
renewal that explicitly seeks to depart from both the old assumption that
economic benefits will invariably “trickle down” to ordinary Americans and the
inclination for deficit reduction and austerity that swept through the world in
the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. The administration has embraced
investment-led growth, largely through supply-side measures, including grants,
loans, tax benefits, and other incentives. Biden’s focus on industrial policy
marks a notable shift. Although government intervention in the economy is
nothing new—indeed, Silicon Valley would not have emerged without it—U.S.
leaders have long shunned industrial policy as running counter to the accepted
wisdom that the state must only create the conditions for markets to operate,
fix market failures when they occur, and otherwise stay out of the way. By
making industrial policy a centerpiece of his economic strategy, Biden has made
it possible to have a thoughtful policy debate about what kind of growth the
United States wants and who it should benefit.
Biden’s industrial
strategy has been rolled out through legislation such as the IRA, CHIPS, the
Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill, and the American Rescue Plan, with a focus on
raising the productive capacity of the U.S. economy and on place-based
investments, in particular in distressed regions. These measures reflect a
desire to promote greater economic inclusion and higher standards of living and
to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
Building a more
inclusive and sustainable economy is an uphill—but vital—battle. Systems of
corporate governance in the country continue to prioritize the interests of
shareholders over the wider set of actors who create economic value. Financial
markets have decoupled from the real economy, with investments often
concentrated in finance, insurance, and real estate firms. Moreover, companies
in the real economy, such as those in pharmaceuticals and manufacturing, are
spending more on share buybacks than on productive activities such as worker
training, infrastructure and technology upgrades, and R & D. Share buybacks
in the United States (in which firms repurchase their own stocks to inflate
their stock prices) have been on the rise for several years, reaching $795.1
billion in 2023, and are expected to increase this year. Companies have spent
over $4 trillion in the last decade in share buybacks. Buying back shares
boosts stock prices and stock options—and, as a result, executive pay—at a time
when income and wealth inequality in the United States is increasing. Union
membership has steadily declined from more than 30 percent in the 1950s to
around ten percent today, wages have lagged productivity since the 1970s, and
the income share of the top one percent of earners has risen from about ten
percent in the mid 1970s to about 20 percent today.
Equally concerning is the flatlining of intergenerational mobility. These
economic trends help explain the disquiet and anger that has boosted Biden’s
challenger, former President Donald Trump.
A New Social Contract
To truly benefit
working people, U.S. industrial policy must help bring about a new social
contract between the state and business and between capital and labor that is
focused on the common good and on restoring public trust in the state. It can
redefine the terms of these relationships. Governments can make access to
public funding and other benefits bestowed by the state conditional on firms
behaving in ways that maximize public value. For example, a firm that receives
loans or tax benefits from the state could be required to ensure that the
goods, services, and technologies it produces remain accessible and affordable
and to share its intellectual property with others. The U.S. government invests
over $40 billion in drug innovation through the National Institutes of Health
but has not yet worked to ensure that the taxpayers funding a drug’s
development are not charged excessive prices. Although such conditions were
notably not embedded in the production of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine,
they were in the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine because Oxford University
researchers made the vaccine’s future accessibility a condition of their
collaboration. Public financing should also come with provisions that require
firms that receive public funds to share a portion of their profits with the
public sector and to promote the reinvestment of business profits into
productive activities, such as worker training and R & D.
To its credit, the
Biden administration has begun moving in this direction. CHIPS, for example,
imposes conditions on companies that receive public support. Participating
firms cannot use the funds received to conduct share buybacks and are required
to put in place plans for training workers, provisions for expanding worker
access to childcare, and commitments to sustainable manufacturing practices.
Nonetheless, critics from trade unions are concerned that these measures are
too flexible and do not go far enough. For example, they do not set minimum
standards for pay across all recipient companies, prevent share buybacks
altogether, require community benefit agreements that help serve residents in
economically disadvantaged areas, or protect the right of workers to organize.
Other critics claim
such measures blur the lines between industrial and social policy and insist
that the primary goal of public investment should simply be to increase
production and productivity. But businesses remain keen to receive support
through CHIPS: as of February, the government has received more than 600
statements of interest from companies in 42 states. Embedding social and
environmental provisions in industrial policy investments not only allows
public money to work better for the public good; such provisions can also make
industrial policy more effective. Provisions related to climate goals, for
example, if designed well, can help accelerate transformations that will make
U.S. industries more globally competitive (as was the case for the German steel
sector, which benefited from public financing conditional on reducing the
carbon emissions of steel production). Protecting the interests of workers
helps maintain good relations between owners and labor, avoiding the
disruptions of strikes such as last year’s action by the United Auto Workers
(UAW). This is not to say that industrial policy should become the
vehicle for advancing all social and environmental priorities. Moreover, the
contracts between the private and public sectors must be thoughtfully and
creatively designed to set clear standards and goals without being overly
proscriptive about how companies must meet them, which could stifle innovation.
No industrial policy
will be successful if it ignores the interests of U.S. workers. As I argued in
a previous essay for Foreign Affairs, the UAW strike underscored the importance of worker rights, representation,
and fair compensation in the transition to a green economy. If the workers
producing the batteries for electric vehicles are earning wages that are below
industry standards, the green transition will not be a just transition—and
without worker and public support, it will stall. Biden has promised on several
occasions to be the most pro-worker and pro-union president in American
history. Although he has offered strong symbolic support (in September 2023,
Biden became the first sitting president to join a picket line), he needs to do
more in terms of policy. In addition to providing fair wages, worker training,
and access to benefits such as childcare (in the case of CHIPS), companies
receiving public support could, for example, be required to allow for worker
representation on their boards—an approach that is more common in Europe and
that can foster a long-term view in management and integrate valuable
perspectives into decision-making that are grounded in a firsthand
understanding of company operations.
To advance a broader
transformation—one that extends to all companies, not only those that receive
direct public support—the administration should prioritize labor law reforms
and consider tools such as sectoral bargaining to empower workers and rein in the
primacy of shareholders. Typically, labor contracts are negotiated between
particular firms and their workers. Sectoral bargaining requires that workers,
businesses, and government sit together to negotiate common standards for an
entire sector or industry—ensuring that those firms that treat their workers
well are not at a disadvantage. This approach already exists in certain states,
such as California, Colorado, and Minnesota, which have passed laws to
establish councils or boards comprised of representatives of labor, business,
and government charged with setting sector-wide standards.
Shaping The Market
Industrial policy can
also achieve a wider goal. The role of government is not to promote growth for
growth’s sake but rather to direct growth so that it benefits more people and
is sustainable. Similarly, its role is not only to fix market failures, but
also to shape markets. U.S. industrial strategy could produce immense positive
change in numerous areas, including in health care, housing, and efforts to
combat climate change. Doing so will require bolder action. Until now, U.S.
industrial policy has relied heavily on tax measures, such as those embedded in
the IRA. But going forward, if Biden wins reelection, industrial policy should
draw upon the full suite of government powers to cultivate a wider array of
policy tools and institutions.
Take, for instance,
the country’s enormous purse. The U.S. federal government is the largest
purchaser in the world, spending over $630 billion annually on products and
services, making public procurement a powerful tool for shaping markets. By
judiciously choosing what to buy and who to buy from, the U.S. government can
create new market opportunities for businesses and catalyze investment and
innovation that aligns with both industrial policy goals and societal and
environmental objectives. The government is already beginning to leverage this
budget to create markets that will drive innovation in critical industries; it
is requiring, for instance, that public procurement of construction materials
prioritize low-carbon options. The administration should consider scaling up
this initiative to incentivize the reduction of carbon emissions in markets
such as agriculture, aviation, shipping, and other sectors in which
decarbonization is difficult. It could also expand the use of strategic
procurement to further other goals. For example, the government could make
procurement from pharmaceutical companies contingent on their guaranteeing
affordable access to their products.
A new, green national
development bank would also enable a swifter expansion of clean energy projects
and low-carbon production. National development banks exist around the world.
Notably, Germany’s national development bank, KfW,
has played a crucial role in the country’s efforts to decarbonize its economy,
lending, for example, to green technology firms and to solar and wind power
projects. The U.S. government could establish a similar national bank, building
on existing plans for a greenhouse gas reduction fund under the aegis of the
Environmental Protection Agency. This bank, working in partnership with
state-level green banks, would complement the slate of tax incentives, grants,
and other policy measures currently in place to encourage decarbonization. For
example, the bank could issue low-interest loans to help sweep aside the
impediments (in large part connected to rising costs caused by inflation) that
are currently blocking the expansion of offshore wind facilities.
Despite the strength
of the economic recovery in the United States since the COVID-19 pandemic,
Biden is trailing Trump, his Republican rival for the presidency, in many key
polls. Trump blames Biden for the struggles of many Americans, but the blame
should lie with the structural problems that too few presidents have addressed.
Biden needs to show he will go after the causes, not only the symptoms, of this
malaise. To do so, he must convince the American public that he has a plan for
building on the early successes of his industrial strategy in a way that will
benefit both businesses and workers and bring about an economy that is
resilient, sustainable, and inclusive—socializing not only the risks but also
the rewards.
For updates click hompage here