Friday, December 31, 2021

THE LIAR IN THE WHITE HOUSE - GAMER LAWYER ON TRICKLE UP ECONOMICS - Biden’s Year-End Whopper on the Economy and a New Year’s Resolution for a Pro-Small Business Congress

 

Alfredo Ortiz: Biden’s Year-End Whopper on the Economy and a New Year’s Resolution for a Pro-Small Business Congress

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 02: U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks about the June jobs report in the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on July 02, 2021 in Washington, DC. Exceeding expectations, the U.S. economy added 850,000 jobs in June and the unemployment rate settled at …
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
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President Biden concluded 2021 the same way he started it, lying about his record. He tweeted Wednesday, “We’re ending 2021 with what one analyst described as the strongest first-year economic track record of any president in the last 50 years.” Even Biden couldn’t make this wild claim directly without the desperate appeal to authority from an unnamed “analyst.”

You don’t need to be an analyst to recognize that this whopper should lay last-minute claim to “lie of the year” in any of the lists made by far-left activist journalists masquerading as independent fact-checkers at seemingly every mainstream media outlet. In reality, the economy is stagnant, with Americans falling further behind due to Biden’s bad policies.

Here are some inconvenient truths that destroy Biden’s argument: Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), is currently running at 6.8 percent, the fastest pace in 40 years. (As I argued in a recent op-ed, when you conduct an apples-to-apples comparison of how inflation is measured now versus 40 years ago, today’s inflation may actually match or even exceed President Carter levels.) The Producer Price Index (PPI), which measures the prices businesses pay for their inputs and is a forward indicator of the CPI, is increasing at a record 9.6 percent.

This runaway inflation is placing an enormous burden on ordinary Americans, especially those on fixed incomes who see their cost of living increase every day. Inflation is significantly exceeding wage growth, resulting in a Biden pay cut of reduced real wages and lower living standards. Unsurprisingly, the mainstream media makes little-to-no mention of these shrinking paychecks, even though they are arguably the biggest issue affecting American wellbeing.

The country is also enduring a supply chain crisis of the likes we haven’t seen in generations. As a result, some Americans couldn’t get their Christmas presents on time. Small businesses can’t access needed inputs, weighing on their profitability. These third-world-style problems of runaway inflation and supply shortages are due to Biden’s reckless spending and distortionary policies.

Biden’s biggest lie regarding his accomplishments comes when he talks about the labor market. He brags that he has created nearly six million jobs since he took office. But these are not new jobs. They are merely ones already created under President Trump that temporarily disappeared during the pandemic. By taking credit for the return of these jobs, Biden is committing the same logical flaw as President Obama, who claimed he was a jobs president by pointing to people returning to work after the Great Recession.

US President Joe Biden coughs as he talks to reporters about the November Jobs Report from the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on December 3, 2021. - Biden said Friday that the United States' employment recovery was "very strong," despite disappointing November job creation data. "America is back to work and our jobs recovery is going very strong. Today's historic drop in unemployment rate includes dramatic improvements for workers who have often seen... higher levels of unemployment," he said. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP) (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

President Joe Biden coughs as he talks to reporters about the November Jobs Report from the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on December 3, 2021. (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

In reality, the labor market remains far below its pre-pandemic peak. There are still four million fewer people working today and nearly five million more people out of the labor force compared to February 2020. After falling precipitously from 66 to 63 percent under Obama, the labor force participation rate (LFPR) actually rose under Trump before the pandemic hit — a remarkable achievement given its long-run decline. Today, the LFPR, including among 25- to 54-year-olds, has gained back only about half of its pandemic-related decline. Nothing to celebrate.

Making this labor market slack even more striking is the fact that America is enduring a historic labor shortage. There are a record 11 million unfilled jobs nationwide — suggesting that some Americans on the labor market sidelines are actively choosing not to work. Small businesses are desperate to hire; but due to the Biden administration’s flawed policies, including increased social welfare programs like monthly child tax payments, many Americans are choosing not to work.

To actually turn the economy into the one in the figment of Biden’s imagination, Congress must support policies that help small businesses. That means telling small businesses once and for all that they won’t face tax increases and new regulations, such as those proposed by the Build Back Broke legislation supported by Biden and Congressional Democrats.

While the prospects for passage of the BBB are thankfully looking slim, ultimately, the only way to bring small businesses and the economy back is by electing pro-small business candidates in the mid-term elections this fall and flipping control of Congress. These small business backers can help enact tax cuts, deregulation, and fiscal sanity to set the stage for a repeat of the historic shared prosperity enjoyed from 2017 to 2019. That’s a New Year’s resolution that all Americans should support.

Poll: Plurality of American Adults Fear What Is to Come in 2022

NORWALK, CT - MARCH 25: Undocumented immigrant Juana, 24, from El Salvador and her husband Saul, 23, from Honduras watch local news in their one-room apartment on March 25, 2020 in Norwalk, Connecticut. Juana lost her job as a house cleaner and Saul as a painter due to the coronavirus …
John Moore/Getty Images
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More than half of adults in the United States are fearful for what is to come in 2022, according to a recent Axios/Momentive poll.

The poll showed that more than half (51 percent) of the respondents said they are fearful for what will happen to the country next year, in 2022, compared to the 48 percent who say they are more hopeful.

There were slightly more (54 percent) respondents that said they are more fearful of what next year holds for the entire world, while only 44 percent said they are hopeful.

The respondents were more hopeful when asked about themselves in 2022. Sixty-eight percent said they are more hopeful for what 2022 has in store for them, while only 30 percent said they are more fearful.

When the respondents were asked, “What word or words would you use to describe the year you had in 2021,” 43 percent of the respondents said, “worrisome” and 43 percent said, “exhausting.”

Thirty-five percent of the respondents said they would like to hear less about the coronavirus pandemic next year, while money and politics were at the forefront when they were asked what issues matter most. Thirty-one percent said, “jobs and the economy,” and 17 percent said, “democracy” as a runner-up. “Health care” was the next closest with 16 percent.

With the current supply chain crisis and the inflation hitting a 40 year high, half (50 percent) of the respondents said 2022 would be a bad year for the economy, with 17 percent saying it will be a “very bad year” for the economy.

The Axios/Momentive poll was conducted between 14 and 16. The sample size was 2,602 adults in the United States. There was a margin of error of plus or minus two percentage points.

Jacob Bliss is a reporter for Breitbart News. You can follow him on Twitter.

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