I guess it depends on what you consider "infrastructure". Quick Google search shows an Op-Ed Joe Biden wrote for New York Times:

Quote:

As for the final third, the act is financing the largest investment in roads since the creation of the Interstate highway system; construction projects at military bases, ports, bridges and tunnels; long overdue Superfund cleanups; the creation of clean energy jobs of the future; improvements in badly outdated rural water systems; upgrades to overtaxed mass transit and rail systems; and much more. These investments create jobs today — and support economic growth for years to come. Far from being a negative, the wide array of these investments is needed given the incredible diversity of the American economy.




Source: Click

I didn't look that up before I said anything. It's just I remember all the rhetoric, where it was pretty much a given that infrastructure type jobs are very effective at creating work. It was the subject of all those "shovel-ready" claims.