Saturday, April 1, 2023

LYING GAMER LAWYER JOE BIDEN - Biden Calls It 'Bizarre' To Say His Spending Caused Inflation. His Economists Say Otherwise

 

Biden Calls It 'Bizarre' To Say His Spending Caused Inflation. His Economists Say Otherwise.

President Joe Biden / Getty Images
March 31, 2023

White House economists admitted last week that the Biden administration's spending may have increased inflation, months after the president dismissed the notion that his trillion-dollar plans boosted prices as "bizarre."

Biden administration economists concluded in the annual "Economic Report of the President" that past stimulus bills "could have contributed to high inflation" over the last two years. Americans did not immediately spend the money they received from pandemic assistance checks, the economists said, and instead saved some to make large purchases later, which increased demand and prices, potentially bumping up inflation.

"If the drawdown of excess savings, together with current income, boosted aggregate demand, it could have contributed to high inflation in 2021 and 2022," the report found. The main driver of President Joe Biden's spending was the March 2021 American Rescue Plan, which cost $1.9 trillion. Other spending bills passed by the president include the $550 billion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the $443 billion Inflation Reduction Act.

The report is evidence of the White House beginning to admit its role in the record inflation seen under the Biden administration, after denying that role for roughly two years. In June, Biden called the idea that his American Rescue Plan increased inflation "bizarre."

"You could argue whether it had a marginal, minor impact on inflation. I don't think it did," Biden said at the time. "And most economists do not think it did. But the idea that it caused inflation is bizarre."

In July 2021, just months after Congress passed the American Rescue Plan, Biden said there was "no serious economist" forecasting inflation.

"There's nobody suggesting there's unchecked inflation on the way—no serious economist," Biden said at the time.

The connection between Biden's spending and inflation is not a new discovery, even for Democrats. Last year, Biden ally and then-House majority whip Jim Clyburn (D., S.C.) said "all of us knew'' inflation was coming after Biden signed his spending bills.

"Let me make it very clear. All of us are concerned about these rising costs, and all of us knew this would be the case when we put in place this recovery program," Clyburn said last April.

The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco pointed to Biden's American Rescue Plan as a significant contributor to inflation. At its peak in June 2022, inflation reached a 9 percent annual rate, the highest level in 40 years.

Published under: American Rescue Plan Economist Economy Federal Stimulus Government Spending Inflation Joe Biden Stimulus


 

Consumer Sentiment Cracks: First Drop in Four Months

Young girl have problems with her credit card till shopping online
Getty Images/praetorianphoto
1:48

Consumer sentiment unexpectedly worsened in March as worries over a looming recession took hold.

The University of Michigan’s index of consumer sentiment fell to 62.0 in March from 67 in February, an eight percent decline. Compared with a year ago, the index is down four percent.

The midmonth preliminary reading came in at 63.4, so the final number indicates that sentiment continued to deteriorate as March progressed. Economists had expected the final March reading to more or less hold steady with the mid-month score.

Surprisingly, it was not the banking crisis that depressed consumer sentiment.

“This month’s turmoil in the banking sector had limited impact on consumer sentiment, which was already exhibiting downward momentum prior to the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank. Overall, our data revealed multiple signs that consumers increasingly expect a recession ahead,” said Joanne Hsu, the director of the survey.

There were steep declines in both the assessment of current conditions and expectations for the future.

“While sentiment fell across all demographic groups, the declines were sharpest for lower-income, less-educated, and younger consumers, as well as consumers with the top tercile of stock holdings. All five index components declined this month, led by a notably sharp weakening in one-year business conditions,” Hsu said.

Year-ahead inflation expectations fell from 4.1 percent in February to 3.6 percent, the lowest reading since April 2021. Long-run inflation expectations came in at 2.9 percent for the fourth consecutive month.


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