Vilsack to Testify Several Times Before Congress This Week

Economic focus: Hearings on bank failures, reports on U.S. household spending and home prices, Fed’s preferred inflation gauge

 


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Washington Focus


 

The House and Senate are in session.

Biden administration officials will continue to present their fiscal year (FY) 2024 spending requests to congressional panels this week, ahead of lawmakers’ two-week Easter recess. This includes USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack, who will make several appearances.

Bank failure hearings on tap this week. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chair Martin Gruenberg, Federal Reserve Vice Chairman for Supervision Michael Barr and Treasury Department Undersecretary for Domestic Finance Nellie Liang will testify Tuesday before the Senate Banking Committee on " Recent Bank Failures and the Federal Regulatory Response."

     The House Financial Services Committee will hold its banking failure hearing on Wednesday.

     The hearings are likely the first of many covering the events that spiraled into a banking crisis that sent customers fleeing from regional banks and sent markets into a frenzy.

The infant formula crisis will be the topic Tuesday when Frank Yiannas, FDA’s former deputy commissioner of food policy and response, is a witness at a House Oversight and Accountability Committee hearing on the 2022 infant formula crisis.

Mergers a focus. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Justice Department's Antitrust Division will co-host a Spring Enforcers Summit on Monday, featuring FTC chair Lina Khan, DOJ assistant attorney general Jonathan Kanter and senior staff from both agencies discussing mergers and conduct enforcement.

Economy conference. Acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra will deliver remarks at the National Community Reinvestment Coalition's Just Economy Conference, which begins Wednesday.

Axios hosts its What's Next Summit on Wednesday, with a focus on artificial intelligence, space travel, the metaverse and the future of work. Guests include NASA administrator Bill Nelson; YouTube Chief Executive Neal Mohan; and Box Inc. co-founder and CEO Aaron Levie.

EV requirements. The Treasury Department will release proposed guidance this week for domestic sourcing requirements for electric vehicles (EVs) to qualify for tax credits provided by the Inflation Reduction Act. The delayed guidance for the $7,500 tax credits was supposed to be released at the end of 2022, but the Treasury temporarily waived the rules and pushed the release date to the end of March.

House Rules Committee will meet Monday to discuss the Lower Energy Costs Act, the energy package introduced by House Republicans earlier this month. The nearly 200-page plan — slammed by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) as a "nonstarter" — contains measures that aim to boost fossil fuel production, speed up approvals of infrastructure projects and repeal major programs in the Inflation Reduction Act. GOP leaders are anticipating passage of Ht in the House before the end of the month by using a limited amendment process.

     The package will likely fail in the Senate, but it is seen as a blueprint for the GOP's energy priorities during this congressional session and should they control all chambers of gov’t following 2024 elections.

WOTUS action in Senate. The Senate this week could consider the House-passed resolution that would undo a Biden administration definition of wetlands that allows for regulations on private lands (Waters of the U.S./WOTUS).

     Republicans used a procedure allowed under the Congressional Review Act, which permits Congress to reject new executive branch rules. The EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers proposed the new definition in late 2021 and the final rule went into effect on March 20, with court action stopping it in two states, Idaho and Texas.

     Perspective: Even if the resolution clears the Senate, by no means a certainty, President Biden has already said he would veto it and Congress very likely does not have the votes to override.

On Wednesday, President Joe Biden co-hosts the second Summit for Democracy — a virtual gathering of world leaders, civil society and private-sector leaders intended to promote democracy in the face of rising autocracies. The first summit, which included representatives from 100 governments around the globe, was held in December 2021.

On the nomination front, President Biden’s Pick to head the FAA withdrew after a Senate panel stalemate. Phil Washington has run Denver International Airport since 2021 and before that had largely surface transportation experience, prompting Republicans to raise concerns about his lack of experience working as a pilot or for an airline. In a Twitter post late Saturday, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg blamed “partisan attacks and procedural obstruction” for Washington’s decision, saying they were “undeserved.” The Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee in the Democratic-led Senate had postponed a scheduled vote on his nomination last week.

On the election front, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) on Sunday announced he won’t make a run for Senate next year and instead endorsed Rep. Barbara Lee’s (D-Calif.) campaign to replace retiring Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.).

     As he gears up for a likely re-election campaign, President Joe Biden kicks off a three-week tour to highlight his signature legislative accomplishments as the impacts of those laws begin to be felt around the country, according to a White House official. The "Invest in America" tour will see Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, first lady Jill Biden and nearly a dozen Cabinet members hit more than 20 states — including key battleground states like Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

Thursday is Opening Day for Major League Baseball. The season gets underway at 1:05 p.m. ET when the Braves play the Nationals, and the Giants face the Yankees.
 


Key Economic Reports & Events for the Week



Key U.S. info comes Friday, including personal income and spending and the Fed's preferred inflation gauge.

Monday, March 27

Tuesday, March 28

Wednesday, March 29

Thursday, March 30

Friday, March 31


Key USDA & international Ag & Energy Reports and Events 



Friday brings USDA’s Prospective Plantings and Grain Stocks reports and Thursday the latest Hogs & Pigs report.

Monday, March 27

     Ag reports and events:

Energy reports and events:

Tuesday, March 28

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Wednesday, March 29

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Thursday, March 30

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Friday, March 31

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:


 

KEY LINKS


WASDE | Crop Production | USDA weekly reports | Crop Progress | Food prices | Farm income | Export Sales weekly | ERP dashboard | California phase-out of gas-powered vehicles | RFS | IRA: Biofuels | IRA: Ag | Student loan forgiveness | Russia/Ukraine war, lessons learned | Russia/Ukraine war timeline | Election predictions: Split-ticket | Congress to-do list | SCOTUS on WOTUS  | SCOTUS on Prop 12 | New farm bill primer | China outlook Omnibus spending package | Gov’t payments to farmers by program | Farmer working capital | USDA ag outlook forum |