Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Inflation starts in D.C.

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

President Joe Biden spoke at the Port of Los Angeles the other day and addressed the issue foremost on the minds of Americans: inflation.

And in the spirit of a tried and true liberal, he blamed everyone in the world for a problem that he is responsibl­e for.

Apparently our president believes that Vladimir Putin is running America.

“We’ve never seen anything like Putin’s tax on both food and gas. . . . Putin’s price hike is hitting America hard. . . . I’m doing everything in my power to blunt Putin’s price hike and bring down the cost of gas and food.”

Speaking on CNN, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen showed she has more integrity than her boss by admitting the inflation situation was mismanaged.

“I think I was wrong about the path that inflation would take,” she said, referring to her observatio­ns last year that escalating inflation was a “small risk” and wouldn’t “be a problem.”

The president does of course see that Putin has some accomplice­s in ravaging Americans with escalating prices. Among these, per Biden, are the ports, the supply chain, foreign shippers and the oil industry.

“One thing I want to say about the oil companies,” said Biden: “They have 9,000 permits to drill. They’re not drilling. . . . Why aren’t they drilling? Because they make more money not producing more oil. The price goes up.”

Our president demonstrat­es that his understand­ing of economics is less than any college freshman.

Oil markets are global and competitiv­e. No one company, even a huge company like ExxonMobil, controls the market. Even the biggest company is just one participan­t in a competitiv­e market.

Unless our president wants to argue that American oil producers are a cartel, like OPEC, that controls about 40 percent of total world oil production, no one company causes the price to move.

Every company is a price taker, not a price maker. Whatever the price is, companies will produce and sell as much as they can to maximize their current revenues. To suggest otherwise is economic ignorance.

Unfortunat­ely, the late great Nobel prize-winning economist Milton Friedman, who explained the causes of inflation, has been washed away in today’s woke culture. Friedman’s famous observatio­n was that “inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, in the sense that it is and can be produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output.”

Friedman is unpopular with liberals because once it is understood that inflation is the result of the government printing excessive amounts of money, we understand that inflation can only be caused by government, because only government can print money.

Economists Steve Hanke and John Greenwood, looking at the rate at which the Biden government was creating money, wrote in The Wall Street Journal in July 2021, “By the end of the year, the year-over-year inflation rate will be at least 6 percent and possibly as high as 9 percent.”

Responding to Biden’s recent explanatio­ns about inflation, Hanke and Greenwood point out, “China, Japan and Switzerlan­d also face elevated oil prices, supply-chain problems and fallout from the war in Ukraine, but their annual inflation rates are 2.1 percent, 2.5 percent and 2.5 percent, respective­ly. They have avoided the ravages of inflation because their central banks haven’t produced excessive quantities of money.”

If there is anything we should be grateful for today, given what is happening, it is that Biden and the Democrats in Congress failed in their Build Back Better plan to layer another $5 trillion in new government expenditur­es into our economy.

Less government spending and more honesty, responsibi­lity and clear thinking is our only path to emerging from today’s economic chaos.

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