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Inside Biden’s $5.8 Trillion Wish List

The framing of President Biden’s latest budget proposal was a notable shift from his 2021 pitch.Credit…Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Policy priorities

President Biden proposed a $5.8 trillion annual budget yesterday, a request that reflects growing security and economic concerns at home and abroad. There are billions set aside to invest in police departments and the military, paid for in part by higher taxes on corporations and the wealthy.

For Congress, the release of the budget, a largely symbolic document, is seen as little more than a suggestion from the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue. Still, it is an important accounting of the administration’s priorities, most notably that Biden appears to be focusing on smaller policy specifics instead of on the sweeping changes in his Build Back Better bill, which he has spent much of his time in office promoting but which was relegated to a footnote in the budget document.

If you don’t have time to comb through all 149 pages, here’s what you need to know about the budget:

  • Spending: The budget would bolster domestic spending by 7 percent from current levels, to roughly $1.6 trillion.

  • Taxes: It proposes raising tax rates for corporations and the wealthiest Americans, including a “Billionaire Minimum Income Tax,” which add up to a $2.5 trillion tax increase over a decade. And as DealBook reported, it also urges new restrictions on stock buybacks.

  • Defense: The administration asks for $773 billion in military spending, a nearly 10 percent increase and a reflection of threats like Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Cybersecurity is also a major security concern reflected in the budget.

  • Infrastructure: It calls for broad increases in funding for the Transportation Department to modernize roads, bridges, ports and public transit systems. The budget includes about $115 billion in funding that was part of the infrastructure bill passed by Congress last year.

  • Climate: It seeks $45 billion to address climate change — an increase of nearly $17 billion from the year before — for the five major agencies tasked with addressing environmental risks. The president also proposed $11 billion to help other countries hit hard by global warming.

  • Health: The administration asks for a major increase for the F.D.A.’s budget to prepare for another pandemic. The agency’s budget would rise by a third, to $8.4 billion.

  • Much, much more: There’s also a 21-percent increase in funding for education, new low-income housing vouchers, an 18-percent rise in spending on diplomatic programs, and a plan to modernize I.R.S. rules, including for crypto tax reporting.

Congressional responses to the budget largely fell along party lines. Democrats praised the emphasis on reducing the budget deficit. Republicans scoffed at proposed tax increases and warned that the proposals would do little to tame inflation. The president said his budget served a “bipartisan unity agenda.” And so begins another round of the arduous process of funding the government, which has become so fraught that the current fiscal year’s budget was approved only this month, too late to include as a basis for comparison for yesterday’s proposal for the next fiscal year.

HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING

FedEx’s founder is stepping down as C.E.O. Fred Smith, who came up with the idea for the shipping company while an undergrad at Yale 57 years ago, will stay on as chairman. He’ll be succeeded as chief executive by Raj Subramaniam, FedEx’s C.O.O.

Tesla plans a stock split for a second time in two years. Shares in the electric carmaker jumped 8 percent after the company disclosed its plans, which would reduce the price of individual shares. (They closed yesterday at $1,091.) Meanwhile, Elon Musk tweeted that he has Covid again.

Disney condemns the enactment of Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law. The entertainment giant quickly issued its statement after Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, signed the anti-L.G.B.T.Q. bill into law yesterday. It’s the latest effort by Disney to take a public stand against the legislation after employees criticized it for staying quiet as the bill took shape.

Apple reportedly plans to cut production of iPhones and AirPods. The tech giant has told suppliers that it will order fewer low-end iPhone SE and AirPods because of weaker consumer demand, according to Nikkei Asia.

A big proxy adviser urges Discovery investors to reject their C.E.O.’s payday. I.S.S. criticized a compensation package for David Zaslav worth $247 million as “excessive,” and pointed to Discovery’s “long history of poor pay practices.” But much of Discovery’s voting stock is controlled by the billionaire John Malone, a Zaslav ally.

The latest in the Russia-Ukraine war:

  • U.S. lawmakers are investigating Credit Suisse’s compliance with sanctions over the invasion. JPMorgan Chase was behind an effort to seize the superyacht of a Russian oligarch facing sanctions in Gibraltar.

  • The Danish brewer Carlsberg, which employs 8,400 people in Russia, said it would quit its business there entirely; Bloomberg L.P. will suspend operations in Russia; and Mubadala, the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, has also halted investments in the country.

  • A major Ukrainian internet provider said it suffered a large cyberattack, and the authorities blamed Russian forces. The inner workings of a pro-Russia hacking group were exposed in a leak.

  • For up-to-the-minute news, see The Times’s live blog and updated maps.


Should pharmacies sell cigarettes?

Walmart is halting sales of cigarettes in some stores in some states, highlighting the pressure on retailers with pharmacies to stop selling tobacco.

A Walmart spokeswoman confirmed the move, reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal, and said that the number of stores involved was “relatively small.” The decision was based on the same criteria applied in the evaluation of any product sold by the nation’s largest retailer. “We are always looking at ways to meet our customers’ needs while still operating an efficient business,” the spokeswoman said.

“Retailers who deliver pharmacy services shouldn’t sell combustible tobacco,” Scott Gottlieb, a former F.D.A. chief, told DealBook, saying that it softens the risks of smoking “by marketing it under the veneer of their public health business lines.” In 2014, more than two dozen attorneys general urged the country’s largest retailers to stop selling tobacco products in stores that also have pharmacies. A number of cities and states now ban sales of tobacco in pharmacies. (Outside the U.S., it is rare for pharmacies to be allowed to sell tobacco products.)

Pharmacies have been pushing further into health care services, making tobacco sales more incongruous. CVS’s decision to drop cigarettes in 2014 was part of its rebrand as CVS Health (it bought the health insurer Aetna a few years later). Walgreens’s C.E.O., Roz Brewer, who is looking to health care for growth, told CNBC last year that tobacco sales were “under real scrutiny” as part of that push. Walmart, for its part, is poised to become a big health care player, too.

Shares of Altria and Philip Morris dipped on the Walmart news. Cigarette sales have mostly been falling for the past 20 years, and for Walmart, tobacco products have become less profitable than candy, in part because of regulation and theft, The Journal reported. Still, there is a cost: When Walmart restricted sales of cigarettes at some of its Sam’s Club locations in 2018, it cut 2 percent from its same-store sales growth rate.


“I think we’ve got a real problem of high underlying inflation that I don’t think will come down to anything like acceptable levels of its own accord.”

— Larry Summers, a former Treasury secretary, on “The Ezra Klein Show” discussing inflation, recession and how the Russia-Ukraine war might aggravate both.


Back in the office, not on the road

Workers are steadily returning to the office, and staying there. Corporate travel spending is a third of what it was before the pandemic, according to the latest survey by the Global Business Travel Association. Some signs suggest that business travel will never return to prepandemic levels.

McKinsey is the latest company to confirm a permanent cut in business travel. The global consulting firm recently decided to reduce its travel by 25 percent from its prepandemic level, according to a company representative. Right now, its workers are not traveling as much as they did before, but as conditions return to normal, the firm has told employees, including senior management consultants and firm leaders, to spend less time on the road.

McKinsey says that less travel will foster collaboration and team building, especially as employees return to the office. Before the pandemic, McKinsey had the ninth-biggest travel budget in corporate America, spending an estimated $265 million on U.S.-booked airfares in 2019, according to Business Travel News.

Climate pledges are another factor that could permanently reduce corporate travel, according to a report released today by IdeaWorks, a corporate travel consulting firm. The report said because corporate travel represented a large portion of professional service firms’ carbon footprints, many will not be able to meet their climate goals without a significant reduction in travel.

Jay Sorensen, the president of IdeaWorks, told DealBook that some business travel is “very durable,” but that there are “a whole lot” of other trips that were once routine but may no longer be taken. “Airlines are planning for a future in which there are fewer business travelers,” he said.

THE SPEED READ

Deals

  • HP agreed to buy the workplace phone and video company Poly for $1.7 billion, in a bet on hybrid workplaces. (WSJ)

  • Shares in AMC Entertainment jumped 40 percent after its C.E.O. said the movie theater chain would strike more diversification deals, like its investment in a gold miner. (Reuters)

  • Some bankers have agreed to cut their fees if the SPACs they help arrange see high investor redemptions. (FT)

  • Barclays will buy back structured notes at a $591 million loss because it sold too many of them. (WSJ)

Policy

  • New York State will use taxpayer money to cover $850 million of the $1.4 billion cost of a new stadium for the N.F.L.’s Buffalo Bills. (NYT)

  • The Justice Department endorsed legislation that would ban tech giants like Amazon and Google from promoting their products over rivals’ on their online platforms. (WSJ)

  • A foundation controlled by the former Google chief Eric Schmidt appears to have outsized influence on the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy. (Politico)

  • How SKDK, the P.R. and political strategy consultancy, became a Washington powerhouse in the Biden era. (WaPo)

Best of the rest

  • Coca-Cola has ended diversity requirements for its outside law firms, after pushback from investors and the departure of the plan’s architect. (Bloomberg Law)

  • Residents of a luxury 59-story skyscraper on Wall Street are frequently stranded by elevator outages. (NYT)

  • Charlie Munger will step down as chairman of the Daily Journal, the newspaper publisher that he uses for investments outside Berkshire Hathaway. (Insider)

  • Will Smith apologized to Chris Rock for slapping him at the Oscars, after the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences condemned the episode. Here’s what it was like in the room when it happened. (NYT, New Yorker)

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