Biden unveils diverse economic team as challenges
to economy grow
The president-elect intends to name Cecilia Rouse,
Neera Tanden and Wally Adeyemo to senior roles in his administration.
By MEGAN
CASSELLA, BEN WHITE and TYLER PAGER
11/29/2020
05:27 PM EST
Updated:
11/29/2020 09:08 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/29/biden-economic-transition-team-441227
After
facing criticism for the lack of diversity in his first round of hires,
President-elect Joe Biden plans to announce three people of color for leading
positions on his economic team.
According
to two people close to Biden’s presidential transition, he is expected to name
Cecilia Rouse, an African American economist at Princeton University, to lead
the Council of Economic Advisers.
Adewale
“Wally” Adeyemo, a Nigerian-born attorney and former senior international
economic adviser during the Obama administration, will serve as deputy Treasury
secretary under former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, who Biden plans to
appoint to lead the Treasury Department.
And as
director of the Office of Management and Budget, Biden plans to nominate Neera
Tanden, president of the liberal think tank Center for American Progress and a
former senior policy adviser to both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton’s presidential
campaigns. Tanden is Indian American.
Biden also
plans to name longtime economic aides Heather Boushey and Jared Bernstein to
serve on the CEA, according to people familiar with the plans. Both Boushey and
Bernstein are white.
The
personnel moves were first reported by the Wall Street Journal.
Cecilia
Rouse answers a question as she sits near an exhibit titled, "In the
Nation's Service? Woodrow Wilson Revisited," in Princeton, N.J.
Cecilia
Rouse answers a question as she sits near an exhibit titled, "In the
Nation's Service? Woodrow Wilson Revisited," in Princeton, N.J. in 2016. |
AP Photo/Mel Evans
Biden has
also settled on a former senior Obama administration official, Brian Deese, as
his top economic adviser in the White House, though the announcement may not
come until later this week, after the transition unveils the other, more
diverse, picks for his economic team.
People
close to Biden’s transition confirmed that Deese, the global head of
sustainable investing at investment giant BlackRock, is Biden's pick for
director of the National Economic Council in the White House. His selection is
likely to rankle some progressives, who have taken issue with his current job
in the financial sector.
Biden has
been under rising pressure to select more people of color for senior jobs in
his administration. One of his most prominent allies, Rep. Jim Clyburn
(D-S.C.), told reporters last week he was unhappy with the number of Black
people in Biden’s administration. Clyburn, the highest ranking Black lawmaker
in Congress, was widely credited with helping Biden win the South Carolina
presidential primary, which revived his struggling campaign.
“From all I
hear, Black people have been given fair consideration,” Clyburn told The Hill
newspaper. “But there is only one Black woman so far.”
“I want to
see where the process leads to, what it produces,” he added. “But so far it’s
not good.”
The newly
announced team will inherit a struggling U.S. economy and one of the weakest
labor markets in the country’s history, with more than 20 million Americans
receiving jobless benefits and an unemployment rate near 7 percent. Biden has
vowed to pass major economic stimulus and relief programs and provide aid to
jobless workers as well as state and local governments, but Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell and the Republican-led Senate have been loath to move on
major spending packages — leaving Biden with limited tools to address the
spiraling crisis.
As the
coronavirus surges, the economy is widely expected to hit another downturn as
more states and localities issue new shutdown restrictions, throwing more
employees out of work. At the same time, a handful of the aid programs Congress
passed in the spring are set to expire at the end of the year, including
expanded unemployment insurance, a national eviction moratorium and delays for
student loan payments.
Without
action by Congress in the next month to extend further relief, an estimated 12
million people will lose their jobless benefits at the end of the year. As many
as 87 million public and private sector workers could lose access to paid sick
and medical leave. The combination of less federal aid, more shutdown
restrictions and spiking coronavirus cases and deaths will have a resounding
effect on the entire U.S. economy, potentially reversing the slow economic
recovery that had begun.
Rouse,
currently the dean of the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs,
previously worked on both Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers and President
Bill Clinton's National Economic Council.
The CEA is
less influential than the National Economic Council, which operates from within
the West Wing. But it serves as the in-house economic forecasting and analysis
unit for the administration and plays a significant role in formulating policy
ideas. The CEA chair is also often a top spokesperson for the White House on
economic issues.
The
director of the Office of Management and Budget is a huge job for any appointee
— an incredibly wonky position that often operates out of the spotlight. But
under the Biden administration, the OMB chief could have a much more elevated
role, central to carrying out an ambitious climate agenda or health care
expansion for millions of Americans through rulemaking across federal agencies.
The agency
not only pulls together an annual budget proposal for Congress, it also reviews
and ultimately greenlights all regulations for implementation, or proposed and
final rules linger and die with the agency.
In Tanden,
Biden has selected a longtime economic policy power broker in the Democratic
Party. A Yale law graduate, Tanden is very close to the Clinton family. She
does not come out of the classic left but is likely to be welcomed by
progressives as a strong addition to Biden’s roster of top economic advisers.
As OMB
chief, Tanden is not likely to worry overly much about deficit spending in the
face of the Covid-19 epidemic. And she is a popular voice for Democrats on
Twitter, with nearly 300,000 followers.
Adeyemo has
less of a public profile, but is well known within Democratic policy circles.
He served in top roles at the Treasury Department, before being named deputy
national security adviser for international economic affairs and deputy
director of the NEC under Obama in 2015. Adeyemo then went on to become the
first president of the Obama Foundation, the former president’s non-profit
organization.
Caitlin
Emma contributed to this article.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário