Trump team floats ‘Infrastructure Bank’ derided by campaign

A key member of Donald Trump’s transition team said the incoming administration is exploring ways to fund fixing bridges and roads including establishing an “infrastructure bank,” a concept Hillary Clinton promoted and the Republican’s campaign had previously derided. Steven Mnuchin, a member of the team’s executive committee who was recommended for the position of Treasury secretary, said in brief comments to reporters Wednesday morning that a “very big focus is regulatory changes, looking at the creation of an infrastructure bank to fund infrastructure investments.” Trump’s campaign had criticised Clinton’s proposed infrastructure bank as being “controlled by politicians and bureaucrats in Washington” and funded by a “$275 billion tax increase on American businesses.” The billionaire’s economic advisers previously said infrastructure spending can be unleashed without creating a government entity. They released a plan in October advocating the provision of as much as $140 billion in tax credits to support $1 trillion in infrastructure investment, which would offset the credits through tax revenue from the projects’ labour wages and business profits. (Scott Lanman and Shobhana Chandra/Bloomberg)

More from Business

  • Ethiopia to open stock exchange in drive for investors

    Ethiopia was set to launch a stock exchange on Friday, the latest step in Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's attempts to liberalise the struggling economy.

  • Supreme Court to hear fight over looming US ban on TikTok

    Facing a looming ban in the United States, TikTok's fate will be in the hands of the Supreme Court in a case being argued on Friday that pits free speech rights against national security concerns over the widely used short-video app owned by Chinese company ByteDance.

  • Nvidia criticizes reported Biden plan for AI chip export curbs

    Nvidia criticized a reported plan by the Joe Biden administration to impose new restrictions on AI chip exports, saying that the outgoing US leader should not "preempt incoming President Trump" by enacting a last-minute policy.

  • UAE advances tech cooperation with US partners at CES 2025

    During his participation at CES 2025 in Las Vegas, a premier global technology event held in Las Vegas, Dr. Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, Minister of State for Foreign Trade, has met with senior US officials and business leaders, as the UAE and the US continue to explore ways to strengthen their strategic cooperation in advanced technology and innovation.

Coming Up