Finance & economics | Free exchange

What an infrastructure bonanza could mean for America’s economy

A clear understanding of its economic effects has been a long time coming

JOE BIDEN’S plan to lavish spending on infrastructure is a crucial part of his bid for a transformative presidency. Much of the first tranche of around $2.7trn, now entering the meatgrinder of congressional politics, will be spent on greening the American economy and tackling inequalities. About a quarter will be directed towards overhauling transport, water and other basic infrastructure—a vast sum, by recent standards. Bridges to nowhere and white elephants are not the stuff of which proud legacies are made, and history’s view of the bill will depend on its specifics, which are still to be determined. Yet economic research suggests that, in the right circumstances, basic infrastructure spending has significant, positive effects in the long run.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Building a boom”

The most dangerous place on Earth

From the May 1st 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Finance & economics

Can anything spark Europe’s economy back to life?

Mario Draghi, the continent’s unofficial chief technocrat, has a plan

Has social media broken the stockmarket?

That is the contention of Cliff Asness, one of the great quant investors


American office delinquencies are shooting up

How worried should investors be?


China is suffering from a crisis of confidence

Can anything perk up its economy?

America has a huge deficit. Which candidate would make it worse?

Enough policies have been proposed to make a call

Why Oasis fans should welcome price-gouging

There are worse things in life than paying a fair price