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REPORT: Biden Economy “Unsustainable,” Trump Reforms “Necessary”

Posted on Wednesday, March 19, 2025
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by Andrew Shirley
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7 Comments
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President Donald Trump’s economic agenda just got a ringing endorsement from America’s second-largest consumer bank.

A recent report from Bank of America underscores the shocking extent to which the Biden economy was built on government spending while also emphasizing the necessity of Trump’s reforms. The report does acknowledge that Trump’s policies, including a significant reduction of government expenditures, may lead to some short-term economic pain, but nonetheless concludes that these policies are necessary for the long-term vitality of the U.S. economy.

Data in the report reveals that “one year ago, 85 percent of U.S. job market growth was in government and sectors dependent on government spending like health and education.” That number now remains alarmingly high at 70 percent, but the fact that it is falling “should raise productivity.”

In other words, the vast majority of the “job growth” touted by the Biden administration was entirely manufactured by deficit spending that sent inflation soaring to levels not seen in 40 years.

Moreover, last year “one-third of [U.S.] GDP came from [local, state and federal] government spending, a record high excluding periods of war or crisis… this was financed by 6-7 percent budget deficits, another unwelcome peacetime record.” Yet more evidence that the Biden economy – which the media and elected Democrats all insisted was quite strong – was in reality propped up by unsustainable government spending.

In short, Biden left a giant mess for the Trump administration to clean up. But the good news is that, as the report outlines, the administration has forwarded a bold plan to do so.

According to Jared Woodard, head of the Research Investment Committee at Bank of America and author of the report, a “handoff from big government to the free market” like Trump administration is leading “may prove slippery” but “seems necessary given large deficits and bloated debt burdens.”

“It may take time for private sector job growth to accelerate, for government workers to resettle, for broad-based corporate profits to rise, and for global trade to find a new equilibrium,” Woodard continued. “In our view, the likely productivity gains from a market-based economic reboot are greater than risks; and the risks from the unsustainable status quo of debt-financed, tepid, and narrow economic growth are severe.”

The report refers to this initial period of turbulence – perhaps reflected in the rocky start to the year for the stock market – as a necessary “detox” from runaway government spending. Given just how much the economy has relied on federal dollars in recent years, this detox won’t be easy.

From 2019 to January 1st, 2025, the federal government spent roughly $6.5 trillion on just the response to COVID-19, exploding the deficit by nearly $1 trillion. In that same period, the national debt increased by about 53 percent to nearly $36 trillion. Put another way, nearly 35 percent of all the debt incurred over the nation’s 249-year history has been added in the past five years.

Of course, much of that funding was necessary to keep the economy afloat through the early days of the pandemic. But by the time Biden signed the $1.9 trillion so-called “American Rescue Plan” in 2021, the pandemic had largely subsided and that enormous sum became little more than a left-wing slush fund.

Despite the magnitude of the challenge that the Trump administration faces, there are some positive early signs. The most recent jobs report revealed that the country had added 10,000 manufacturing jobs during Trump’s first full month in office, a significant reversal from an average of 9,000 lost every month under the Biden administration. Additionally, 93 percent of new jobs added in February were in the private sector, another dramatic shift from the data outlined in the Bank of America report.

February inflation data also showed a 2.8 percent increase in prices, beating expectations. According to Truflation, a blockchain-based provider of real-time economic data, inflation has slowed to around 1.3 percent this month. While official numbers won’t be out until April, 1.3 percent would be the lowest inflation number since December 2020. The core inflation rate, which excludes volatile prices such as those for food and energy, has already hit a four-year low since Trump took office.

Years of reckless government spending under Biden created an artificial sense of prosperity that was never sustainable. Now, as the Trump administration works to restore balance, the temporary market volatility reflects the economy’s transition from government dependence to private-sector-driven growth.

But some short-term pain – perhaps already subsiding – is a small price to pay for long-term stability, lower inflation, and real job creation. As the Bank of America report notes, a market-based economy will ultimately yield greater productivity and stronger growth. Trump’s reforms are the only viable path forward to ensure a thriving economy built on real, sustainable prosperity, rather than endless government intervention.

Andrew Shirley is a veteran speechwriter and AMAC Newsline columnist. His commentary can be found on X at @AA_Shirley.

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Michael J
Michael J
3 hours ago

When was the last time government workers were laid off outside of congress failing to avert a shut down? Where is it written that these same non-essentials are entitled permanent positions, where civilian counterparts serve at the pleasure of their employer? The government can and has created many things out of thin air simply because oversight has never been a priority until now. Anyone losing their job is a tragedy, but why all of sudden do federal workers get extra sympathy and outrage from the left and it’s media? It’s no longer business as usual and it’s been along time coming.

Jack
Jack
2 hours ago

Go DOGE !!!!

Kaiju
Kaiju
2 hours ago

Everything about the Liberal Agenda is unsustainable. But…Bank of Amerika is singing this tune??? Opportunist entity with an agenda playing both sides. Not to be trusted. Won’t do business with them.

Melinda C
Melinda C
1 hour ago

Let’s hope Trump’s supporters are wise enough to realize the validity of Shirley’s points and will be patient for results.

FedUp
FedUp
1 hour ago

The democrat far left agenda has always been to collapse western civilization by destroying the nuclear family, sowing chaos, and destroying our economy to the point that a communist/Marxist government, run by the democrats, could step in an have the entire country beholden to the government for their existence.

Ed J
Ed J
22 minutes ago

It is refreshing to see President Trump, through his Executive Orders and DOGE, rapidly turning our nation around and fixing all the problems Biden created. MAGA — we are getting there!

Franklin Werkheiser
Franklin Werkheiser
49 minutes ago

The liberal Far Left Democrats Economy was purposely created to destroy America and put us in line with all the Communist, Socialist and Islamic Countries. Americas citizens, like those other Countries citizens would then be controlled by our government. Unfortunately, there continue to be many ignorant and clueless individuals out there that refuse to understand this and just do not get it. Unfortunately, also neither do the Rhino Republicans and their supporters who continue to lash out at President Trump.

U.S. President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris attend the inauguration ceremony of Donald Trumpin the U.S. Capitol Rotunda on January 20, 2025 in Washington, DC. Donald Trump takes office for his second term as the 47th president of the United States.
U.S. President Donald Trump looks down from the Presidential Box in the Opera House at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts as he participates in a guided tour and leads a board meeting on March 17, 2025 in Washington, DC. After shunning the annual Kennedy Center Honors during his first term in the White House, Trump fired the center’s president, removed the bipartisan board of Biden appointees, and named himself Chairman of the storied music, theater, and dance institution.
Cropped Hand Of Men Removing Handcuffs
President Ronald Reagan During a Photo Op. with Tony Dolan in The Oval Office, 1/13/1989

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