By Jim Geraghty
Wednesday, September 21, 2022
There’s a good reason to be worried about inflation.
The Consumer Price Index measures how today’s prices
compare to the prices twelve months ago. If you see 2 percent inflation as normal or stable as the Federal
Reserve does, then when the CPI number gets well beyond 2 percent, that’s when
we worry. If you look at the month-by-month numbers, the Biden presidency started with
normal numbers, then jumped to 4.2 percent in April 2021, and then 5 percent in
May. With the country emerging from Covid and people getting out and spending
more, and also struggling with a shortage of goods because of supply-chain
issues, maybe we shouldn’t have been that surprised to see
demand getting higher, supplies getting lower, and prices rising.
But it didn’t turn out to be a short-lived issue of
product shortages or pent-up demand. The CPI rate remained between 5 and 5.4 percent
from May to September of 2021 — and it was in July 2021 when Biden
declared that:
“There’s nobody suggesting there’s
unchecked inflation on the way — no serious economist.” In other words, by
July, people were already starting to notice that inflation was getting high
and that it hadn’t been a one or two-month blip.
When we look at the CPI numbers for
August 2022 — 8.3 percent — that figure is telling us the increase in prices
compared to the numbers of August 2021, which had already taken an inflationary
jump of 5.3 percent compared to August 2020. With each passing month since
March, we’ve seen 8 percent to 9.1 percent inflation, and that’s on top of the
higher prices we were starting to pay last summer and fall! After last year’s
prices took a significant jump, this year’s price increases should look smaller
by comparison. But they don’t! Instead, they look bigger, indicating that
inflationary pressures are getting worse, not better.
This week, Ford Motor Company announced lower-than-expected
earnings, and warned of “inflation-related supplier costs that will run about
$1 billion higher than originally expected.”
Today, the Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest
rates again, this time by three-quarters of a percentage point; some people who
understand rates and markets much better than I do contend that the Fed’s
current approach is like ripping off a Band-Aid really slowly.
I’ll let the professional economists hash that out, but
I’ll note that the Fed is trying to reduce the amount of money sloshing around
in the economy, while the federal government and certain state governments are
trying to throw even more money into the economy. If the Fed isn’t seeing the
results it wanted to see by now, maybe it’s because the White House and Congress
are rowing their oars in the wrong direction?
Even Vox conceded that the American
Recovery Act — proposed by the Biden administration and passed entirely by
Democrats — exacerbated inflation; this is about as close as you’re ever going to find to a “mea
culpa” over there:
It’s true that the American Rescue
Plan wasn’t the primary cause of today’s inflation. But if inflation was always
going to be a problem, then it’s important to avoid policies that could make it
a much worse problem.
In retrospect, it seems that
Democrats simply didn’t take this seriously enough back in early 2021. They
wrongly concluded that a stimulus far in excess of what models said was necessary
was the less risky option. They thought they were still in the “money
printer go brrr” era, where there was less pressure to be judicious
about where that money was going — so instead of targeting help to those who
needed it, they sent hundreds of billions of dollars to well-off Americans and
states doing just fine, for political reasons.
Back in March, economists at the Federal Reserve analyzed the numbers and
concluded that, “Among other reasons, the sizable fiscal support measures
aimed at counteracting the economic collapse due to the COVID-19 pandemic could
explain about 3 percentage points of the recent rise in inflation.”
Now throw in the $1.2 trillion in new spending of the
infrastructure bill — “More than $850 billion in funding from the
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is currently making its way to state and
local governments” — and the massive spending contained within the so-called
“Inflation Reduction Act,” which the Penn-Wharton budget model concluded would have “no
meaningful effect on inflation in the near term.” The roughly $1 trillion or so in student-loan forgiveness will
also make certain recipients feel like they’ve been given $10,000, which will
make them spend more.
But wait, there’s more! Next month, the state of California will send checks ranging
between $200 to $1,050 as “inflation relief payments” to everyone making less
than $250,000 and to joint filers who make more than $500,000 annually.
In other words, to fight inflation, which is too much
money chasing too few goods, the state of California is giving everyone more
money.
But the other nagging reason for worry stems from what we
can discern from Biden’s comments on 60 Minutes this past
Sunday:
SCOTT PELLEY: Mr. President, as you
know, last Tuesday the annual inflation rate came in at 8.3 percent. The stock
market nosedived. People are shocked by their grocery bills. What can you do
better and faster?
BIDEN: Well, first of all, let’s
put this in perspective. Inflation rate month to month was just — just an inch,
hardly at all–
PELLEY: You’re not arguing that 8.3
percent is good news?
BIDEN: No, I’m not saying it is
good news. But it was 8.2 percent or — 8.2 percent before. I mean, it’s not —
you’re ac — we act — make it sound like all of a sudden, “My God, it went to
8.2 percent.” It’s been—
PELLEY: It’s the highest inflation
rate, Mr. President in 40 years.
BIDEN: I got that. But guess what
we are. We’re in a position where, for the last several months, it hasn’t
spiked. It has just barely — it’s been basically even. And in the meantime, we
created all these jobs and — and prices — have — have gone up, but they’ve come
down for energy. The fact is that we’ve created 10 million new jobs.
Let’s put aside the usual criticism of Biden. If you’re
Biden and his team, you must know that Pelley is going to ask about inflation,
and you had better have a good answer. One might expect the president to say
something like, “My team and I know inflation is still too darn high,
and Americans are feeling it. That’s why we’re doing X, Y, and Z.”
Instead, Biden’s response was, “For the last several
months, it hasn’t spiked. It has just barely — it’s been basically even” — in
other words, it’s not that bad. But it is that bad! Biden’s
other maneuver is to point to the low unemployment rate. But Americans are
understandably unimpressed with low unemployment when they’re living with month
after month of the highest inflation in four decades.
In Biden’s mind, inflation is almost completely fixed;
people like Pelley are being unreasonable by bringing it up as a problem,
“making it sound like all of a sudden, my God, it went to 8.2 percent.” Biden’s
answer suggests that he thinks the Fed has got this problem licked. And a president
can’t solve a problem he can’t see — or perhaps it is more accurate to say
he won’t see it.
As for Biden’s contention that prices have “come down for
energy,” he presumably means gas prices . . . except, according to AAA, gas prices
just stopped declining; yesterday the national average increased by a
penny, from $3.67 to $3.68 — and by historical averages, that’s still really
high!
Back in November 2021, Biden expressed surprise at how
high gas prices were getting: “Did you ever think you’d be paying this much for
a gallon of gas? In some parts of California, they’re paying $4.50 a gallon!”
This morning, the average price of a gallon of gas in
California is $5.49. Biden continues to spike the football at the
slightest bit of good news, ignoring the bigger picture.
And even if gas prices are down, we’re shifting from
summer driving season to winter heating season — and that’s going to be brutal:
Americans are in store for an
expensive winter when it comes to paying their heating and electric bills.
The average household will pay
about 17 percent more this winter to heat their property, reaching a 10-year
high of about $1,200 per home, according to a forecast from the nonprofit National Energy Assistance
Directors Association. Electric bills are also set to rise, with the U.S.
residential price of electricity expected to jump about 7.5 percent from
2021, according to
the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
And yet Biden is on national television, insisting that
prices “have come down for energy.”
(National Review’s Dominic Pino notes that
Biden’s entire characterization of the economy is an alternate universe:
“Inflation cannot continue to decline when, by the president’s own
characterization, it is ‘basically even.’ And the economy cannot continue to
grow when it has, in fact, been shrinking for two consecutive quarters. Whether
that counts as a recession is debatable, but whether negative numbers count as
growth is not.”)
I listen to sports radio, and right now, they’re running
a promo for the Tony Kornheiser Show that goes something like
this — “I was in a fast-food joint, and I hadn’t been in one in a while. I get
a burger, fries, and drink, and the guy behind the counter tells me, $13.72. I
was like ‘13-72? What is that, my order number?’”
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