President-elect Trump wants Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. Kennedy is a vaccine skeptic who's pushed conspiracy theory, so how would he handle a department overseeing public health? I'm Steve Innscape with Michelle Martin, and this is a first from NPR News.
Stocks climbed after the election while bond markets sent a different signal. Bond prices suggest investors see higher inflation and higher debt in President-elect Trump's economic plans. How might that affect your economic situation? And President Biden sits down with Chenishijing Ping in Peru for their last meeting before Biden leaves office.
There is actual work to do in this critical moment to ensure that we don't run into any problems. Biden is focused on keeping relations steady during a delicate transition of power. Will their meeting help maintain stability? Stay with us, we'll give you the news you need to start your day.
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This message comes from NPR sponsor Mint Mobile. From the gas pump to the grocery store, inflation is everywhere. So Mint Mobile is offering premium wireless starting at just $15 a month. To get your new phone plan for just $15, go to mintmobile.com-slashswitch. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be nominated by President-elect Trump to run the Department of Health and Human Services.
He also spreads several conspiracy theories while chatting with the podcast host Joe Rogan, RFK Jr. said Wi-Fi causes cancer. While talking on X with Elon Musk, he claimed that school shootings are linked to antidepressants and elsewhere RFK questioned the link between AIDS and HIV, which is the virus that causes it.
Jim, you asked us to tell us more about Kennedy's background and what his confirmation could mean for the agency as NPR health policy correspondent, Selina Simmons, Stephen. Selina, good morning. Good morning, Michelle. So obviously many people have heard of Kennedy. He's part of a very famous democratic political family that includes the former president, John, of Kennedy. But tell us more about him as a public figure.
Well, most recently he ran for president as an independent before dropping out in August and endorsing Trump, who has been enthusiastically using his Make America Healthy Again line. Kennedy is an attorney. He went to Harvard in the 70s and got his law degree at UVA. He struggled with drug addiction. And it was actually an arrest for heroin possession in the 80s that led to volunteering with the Natural Resources Defense Council to fulfill community service hours.
He went to a whole career in environmental advocacy. And around 20 years ago he got interested in vaccine conspiracy theories, especially in the disproven link between vaccines and autism. That has been a huge focus of his work and life since that. Okay, so what about the agency he would be in charge of? Give us a tour of the Department of Health and Human Services. So HHS is enormous. It's got one of the biggest budgets in the federal government, $1.7 trillion.
That's trillion with a T. That's about the GDP of Australia. And within HHS are a lot of health agencies, Medicare and Medicaid are under HHS. So is the Food and Drug Administration, the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Those are probably the health agencies people hear the most about. But there are all these other agencies, like one that runs community health centers across the country. There's another for mental health.
In all HHS employees, about 90,000 people across these agencies, Trump has promised to let Kennedy quote, go wild on health and dramatically shake things up. Do we have any idea of what Kennedy going wild on health might look like? Well, he recently said he'd like to fire 600 NIH employees. He's talked a lot about rooting out corruption. Some of his ideas are pretty mainstream, like promoting nutritious foods and addressing chronic disease.
He said he wants to ban prescription drug advertisements. He rightly points out that American life expectancy is really pretty bad and lags behind other wealthy countries by a lot. But he has some views that are really far out of the mainstream. We've talked about vaccine skepticism, current CDC director Mandy Cohen wrote to NPR yesterday quote, I don't want to go backwards and see children or adults suffer or lose their lives to remind us that vaccines work.
And so I'm concerned, unquote, the idea of someone who's actively so misinformation about vaccines being in charge of the government's scientific research and public health agencies really horrifies a lot of people in those fields. This is a Senate confirmed position. Do we have a sense of whether he will have the votes to be confirmed? Well, we'll have to see some Republican senators have responded enthusiastically to his nomination. Others won't say yet.
Interestingly, his campaign website says he supports abortion access. He wrote quote, I'm for choice and medical freedom. We'll see how that position plays out among Republicans who are eager to curtail abortion access federally once they take power in Washington. That is NPR Selena Simmons, definitely. Thank you. You're welcome. Stocks surge following Donald Trump's reelection, but the bond market is a different story. They've been selling off in a big way.
And that affects everything from interest rates to inflation. Yeah, bond investors say they're alarmed about parts of the president-elect's economic agenda, which is important because the bond market matters so much for business and governing. If interest rates are low, your company and your government can borrow lots of money cheap and if interest rates climb, life gets more expensive. Fast. For more on this, we are joined by NPR senior business editor Rafael Gimmerning. Hey, Michelle.
So just briefly, give us the basics of what are bonds and why do they matter? We've said a little bit about that, but just what are they? Good question. A lot of people don't get bonds, but it's actually pretty simple. The way it works is that the government sells bond investors. They're talking banks, other countries, individual people. Think of it as a loan. The government needs to borrow money to function and to afford all of its spending.
These investors are the bank and they're lending their money to Uncle Sam. Then Uncle Sam promises to pay back these investors with interest. And when bond investors get spooked, they demand more interest from the government. And that's exactly what's happening now. So why the sell-off? Well, there are two critical things to the economy that could get worse under a new Trump administration. Inflation and the government finances. Now let's tackle inflation first.
Although Trump has promised to lower inflation, many bond investors believe he could actually do the opposite and take tariffs. Trump is proposing a wide range of tariffs and the US imports a lot of things. Close, toys, shoes, tech gadgets, you name it. Taris obviously make those things more expensive. Trump also wants to cut taxes. For example, he wants to exempt workers in restaurants and other places from paying taxes and tips. All of that could make the country's finances a lot worse.
And they're already pretty bad. The budget deficit in the last fiscal year was 1.8 trillion dollars, the third highest on record. So you heard Steve earlier say that bonds wield a lot of power. How do bond investors wield their power? Because they can essentially tell the government we won't be lending you any more money. And that would put the government in a pinch. Now if the interest of the US pays on its bond surges, and it can also create a lot of paying to the country's finances.
And this fears in bond markets can spread to other markets like stocks. Fear is pretty contagious after all. And it has happened before around the world. About two years ago in the United Kingdom, bond investors revolted. It helped create a financial storm. And it took down the prime minister in a matter of weeks. There's even a term for bond investors that wield their power this way. Bond, Bigeilantes. This investors could stop buying bonds.
It's effectively telling the government like I was telling you, we're not going to lend you any more money unless you reconsider some of your policies. Now the US is obviously much bigger than the UK. And we also don't know what Trump is actually going to do. But things could get rocky very quickly if he does all the things he's promised. So very briefly, how would this affect regular people?
Yes, because the US bond market influences all kinds of interest payments from credit cards to odd allowance to mortgages. So when they're spaining the bond market, it's not just a Trump administration that will feel the impact. It could be people like you and me. That is NPR's Rafael. Now Rafael, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. President Biden is in Lima, Peru, where he's meeting with leaders from the Asia Pacific region, including China's president Xi Jinping.
The two will sit down tomorrow and what is expected to be their final summit before Biden leaves office. Here's how the president's national security adviser, Jake Sullivan described it. So it's an important meeting. It will not be just a valid victory, although there will be an element of reflecting over the course of their long relationship.
There is actual work to do in this critical moment between the US and China to ensure that we don't run into any problems in the next two months in this transition of power. NPR White House correspondent Asma Khalid is in Lima with the president and she is with us now. Good morning. Good morning, Michelle. So as of course, we all know, President Biden is at the end of his time in office. What can he actually get done at this meeting tomorrow? I mean, there are two main missions for this meeting.
One is that Biden wants to cement the policy cooperation fee. He feels he's been able to achieve in this relationship over the course of the last four years, you know, work to stop the flow of fentanyl coordination on climate issues and discussions around the challenges of artificial intelligence.
But I was most importantly, the other main mission here is to emphasize that it is important to keep the lines of communication open, particularly the lines of military to military cooperation you might recall, though stopped for a bit because of tensions over spying. And Biden wants to make this point clear during this transition period where one administration is handing off to the next because they believe this administration believes that it is a delicate moment.
Here's how Biden's National Security Advisor, Jake Sullivan, explain that. Transitions are uniquely consequential moments in geopolitics. There are time when competitors and adversaries can see possibly opportunity because you have this change in government here. And so part of what President Biden will communicate is that we need to maintain stability, clarity, predictability through this transition.
And how can he credibly make that point about predictability given that President-elect Trump wants to roll back and change much of what President Biden has done? That is a fair understanding, given how much disagreement there is in Washington over policy. But one rare area of bipartisanship is China policy. There's been a degree of continuity. For example, Trump in his first term put sweeping tariffs on imports of Chinese goods and Biden for the most part has kept those in place.
And one thing that caught my ear is that Biden's National Security Advisor told reporters that he sees some continuity in China policy based on who Trump has selected for National Security Advisor. That's Congressman Mike Walts and also his pick for Secretary of State Senator Mark Rubio. Both of these men have been really focused on the challenges with China.
And this White House feels that competition with China is going to be the defining issue for what the world looks like in the coming decades. And so in order for the U.S. to succeed over the long run, they feel that U.S.-China relationship really need to have bipartisan support. And to that point, one thing the Biden administration really aggressively went after during its time in office was something called export controls. This is the regulating the sale of certain technology to China.
And experts think that that may continue in a Trump administration. Trump has said he wants to hike tariffs on China. That is something he promised during the campaign. Do we know where their Biden is going to talk about that with Xi? Biden is expected to talk about unfair trade practices. But what that looks like isn't clear. I mean, one person I spoke to before this trip, Danny Russell. He was a top state department official during the Obama years.
He told me he thinks Biden could use this meeting to try to underscore that China needs to shift its ways rather than just threaten to escalate and retaliate. And President Xi, though I should point out, has his own relationship with the former and now future President Trump. They had meetings during Trump's first term and trade was always front and center. So I'm not sure that Xi or Trump will be looking for advice there. That is NPR's Asma Khaled. Asma, thank you. My pleasure.
And that's up first for Friday, November 15th. I'm Michelle Martin. And I'm Steve Inzki. Up first comes your way on the weekend too. I, Shirasco and Scott Simon have the news in this feed or wherever you get your podcasts. Today's episode of up first was edited by Diane Weber, Pala V. Gugoy, Roberta Rampton, Muhammad El-Bardisi and Alice Wolfley. It was produced by Ziyan Butch, Neha Dumas and Julie Deppinbrock. Our executive producer is Erica Aguilar.
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