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Equity must be a guidepost for Congress on reconciliation


The devastating health toll of COVID-19 caused the United States to shed a net total of nearly 10 million jobs in 2020: The worst annual employment figure in more than 80 years, hitting hardest those populations for whom every day can be a health and economic crisis. 

A sharp increase in the nation’s poverty rate appeared all but inevitable. Yet thanks to historic infusions of federal dollars directly into people’s pockets, poverty rates actually declined in 2020 and are projected to fall even further this year. 

Whether these declines represent the start of a more equitable policy era will soon be revealed as Congress enters the homestretch of negotiations over a budget reconciliation measure that represents a historic opportunity to transform people’s lives both in the short-term and long after the pandemic recedes. Congress simply cannot let this opportunity pass. 

More than 700,000 — or, 1 in 500 people in the United States — have now died from COVID-19, with death rates among Black, Latino and Indigenous people at least twice as high as those among white people. We continue to see nearly 100,000 new cases and 2,000 deaths every day. 

A new poll from NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health shows the resulting economic fallout. Even with increased economic assistance, 38 percent of U.S. households report facing serious financial problems over the past few months amid the Delta variant surge. The impact is most pronounced among households with incomes below $50,000 and Black and Latino households with children, with approximately 60 percent of those households reporting serious financial problems. 

These findings must shake Congress from a state of complacency. While our current national economic situation has improved since the early days of the pandemic, the recovery has been uneven and inequitable. The budget reconciliation measure is the best chance in decades to help create an America in which skin color, income level, neighborhood, disability, occupation and immigration status no longer determine how long and how well people live. Congress must:

The final negotiations over the budget reconciliation measure could be among the most consequential in generations. The notion of America being a land of opportunity is a fantasy for millions of people, reserved only for those of privilege. The short-term policy response to the pandemic has revealed the type of nation we could be if we continue to move forward — one where all people truly have a fair and just opportunity to live the healthiest life possible. The next few weeks will reveal whether our congressional representatives are up to the task.   

Richard E. Besser, a physician, is president and chief executive of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and former acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  Twitter: @DrRichBesser