To listen to Politico, former Clinton and Obama economic adviser Larry Summers is the key voice on the economic recovery from the pandemic, due to his public worrying earlier this year about the threat of inflation. But Politico isn’t actually listening to Summers, either — instead, it’s twisting his positions in an attempt to slow down the Biden administration’s infrastructure and public investment programs, which Summers actually supports.
In the Wednesday afternoon edition of Politico’s Playbook newsletter, asking whether the White House “owe[d] Larry Summers an apology,” the site said that the Build Back Better bill “might now be a harder sell” because the administration had not followed Summers’ earlier advice, and that there was “a lesson here about the insularity of this White House.”
By Thursday morning, Politico was acknowledging that “Summers supports both BIF and BBB,” while still hailing him as “the OG inflation Cassandra,” and casting him as a White House critic. And it only got worse from there, with the site publishing an opinion piece Thursday that made it appear as if Summers’ position would be to oppose the Biden administration’s infrastructure package and Build Back Better agenda — the exact opposite of his actual stance.
To be clear, inflation is currently a worldwide phenomenon, not just limited to the United States, due to global supply problems in which national economies are recovering out of sync from each other and still subject to localized disruptions. Other experts such as Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi also disagree with Summers on inflation being linked to the size of the pandemic relief bill — which Summers believed was larger than it should have been — arguing instead that “as the Delta wave wanes, inflation will moderate.”
Summers’ position is actually more nuanced than most media outlets have presented. He has previously tweeted that he was not worried about the infrastructure program contributing to inflation, explaining that it would increase the “supply potential” of the economy: “Inflation fears should shape econ policies but it would be tragic if they stopped us from making urgently needed public investments.” And just last week, Summers congratulated Congress on passing the bipartisan infrastructure bill, calling it “an important step in the right direction.”
Contrary to the simplistic media portrait, Summers is not some kind of reflexive naysayer against Biden’s agenda, but a supporter voicing caution (rightly or wrongly) on the approach to certain points. All of this became clear on Wednesday night’s edition of CNN’s Cuomo Prime Time.
“My experience is that you should hope for the best, and plan for something much less than the best,” Summers said regarding the inflation situation. “And I think that means stronger actions by the Fed, it means the administration has to be thinking about inflation.”
At the same time, Summers expressed his support for the Build Back Better bill, and the need for longer-term public investments and more taxation of the well-off.