Skip to main content

Trump calls for $2 trillion US infrastructure spend

US president Donald Trump has called for an $2 trillion Infrastructure Bill - just days after signing the same amount in a relief package to help the economy during the Covid-19 pandemic. 
By Adam Hill April 7, 2020 Read time: 1 min
US president Donald Trump backs a $2 trillion infrastructure spend (© Marc Studer | Dreamstime.com)

In a tweet he wrote that the money in the new bill should be “focused solely on jobs and rebuilding the once-great infrastructure of our country!”

Congress has already been urged to renew another key piece of infrastructure legislation, which authorised $305 billion for highway and motor vehicle safety, public transportation from 2016-20. 

Observers suggest that significant sums are certainly required. 

Writing on LinkedIn, Shailen Bhatt, president and CEO of ITS America, noted that 2009’s $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) stimulus included just over $100 billion for infrastructure, $50 billion of which was for roads, bridges, and high speed rail.

This followed the 2008 banking crisis and financial crash.

“In retrospect, it is clear that ARRA wasn’t enough of a stimulus to pull the American economy out of the doldrums,” Bhatt suggested. “It would have also been better to invest more in infrastructure at the time. Over the next several years we saw ground breakings and ribbon cuttings on new projects that improved our transportation system and put Americans back to work."

Related Content

  • Funding shortfall for US Interstate upgrades
    May 11, 2012
    Andrew Bardin Williams investigates tolling on the federal Interstate system as maintenance and upgrade requirements increasingly outpace funding The I-95 corridor through North Carolina is one of the most heavy trafficked interstates in the US, seeing upwards of 46,000 vehicles per day in some stretches-and North Carolina’s Department of Transportation (NCDOT) estimates this number will to rise to 98,000 vehicles per day by 2040. Along with the rest of the federal interstate system, the North Carolina str
  • Safer Road Fund wins royal recognition
    December 1, 2021
    Road schemes designed to prevent 1,450 fatal and serious injuries over next 20 years
  • Two deaths in Tesla crash with no driver
    April 21, 2021
    Victims found in the front and back seats - but this was not an autonomous vehicle
  • Analysis finds more than 2,275 Illinois bridges need structural repair
    April 25, 2014
    An analysis of the 2013 National Bridge Inventory database released this month by the US Department of Transportation (USDOT) shows cars, trucks and school buses cross Illinois's 2,275 structurally compromised bridges 13,000,000 times every day. The ARTBA analysis of the bridge data supplied by the states to the USDOT found: Illinois ranks ninth nationally in its number of structurally deficient bridges, and 28th in the percentage of its bridges that are classified as structurally deficient, at nine per cen