Yellen, Summers Spar About Overheating Risk in Stimulus Plan

In making the case for a mammoth $1.9 trillion economic relief package, President Joe Biden and his acolytes had maintained that economists across the board agreed that now is the time to go big in the fight against the pandemic.

Well, so much for that. A number of prominent economists and former policy makers -- from Democrat Lawrence Summers to Republican Douglas Holtz-Eakin -- have raised questions in the past week about the size of the package. So too have some economy watchers in the financial markets.

While they don’t disagree that the U.S. needs additional help, they’ve highlighted the potential costs of doing a whole lot more: Economically, there’s the risk of much faster inflation and a stock market bubble. And politically, it could reduce the appetite in Congress for future fiscal action to tackle longer-term priorities such as infrastructure spending and fighting climate change.

Biden doubled down on his pitch for a big package on Friday.

“Some in Congress think we’ve already done enough to deal with the crisis in the country. Others think that things are getting better and we can afford to sit back and either do little or nothing at all,” he told reporters at the White House. “That’s not what I see. I see enormous pain.”

Expectations for another big U.S. spending bill have helped stoke expectations for a strong rebound, with stock futures signaling another record in the S&P 500 index Monday. Thirty-year Treasury bond yields climbed through 2% for the first time in almost a year, while Brent oil advanced above $60 a barrel for the first time in more than a year.

Some 10 million Americans remain without work because of the fallout from the Covid-19 virus. Almost 40% of the unemployed have been jobless for 27 weeks or more, and uncertainty about the virus or rollout of vaccines continues to hold back hiring and activity.