Boston Herald

US can take steps to reverse Biden’s food-flation

- By Betsy McCaughey Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York and author of “The Next Pandemic.”

Going food shopping feels like getting punched in the gut. You pick up a whole roasting chicken, hoping it will feed four, and see the price: over $10 in many New York area stores — a staggering $18 if the bird’s organic. Apples are close to $3 a pound. And forget buying a steak; you might have to take out a mortgage.

The Biden administra­tion’s woke policies are to blame for food-flation, making your trip to the supermarke­t sheer agony. President Biden is prioritizi­ng climate preservati­on over your ability to feed your family affordably.

His policies are driving up the costs of fertilizer, energy and farmto-store transporta­tion — add to that overall inflation driven by excessive federal government spending. The result is sky-high food prices.

There’s no relief in sight. You can expect record-breaking food-flation through the rest of 2022, according to Bank of America market analysts.

Americans have been whiplashed with a series of phony White House explanatio­ns for soaring prices. First Biden blamed profiteeri­ng oil producers, then colluding meat packers, then “Putin’s price hike.”

Last Tuesday, Biden spoke to the nation on what he billed as his plan to remedy inflation. But in fact, he just repeated the same list of unsubstant­iated excuses for why prices keep rising.

The president’s media cheerleade­rs have been covering up the actual causes. Washington Post columnist Heather Long announced that Americans are entering a “new age of scarcity” when “a lot of everyday life remains out of control,” as if food-flation is as inevitable as lunar eclipses. Wrong.

Biden’s damaging policies can be reversed.

Start with fertilizer­s and pesticides, which are costing American farmers 50% more than just a year ago. Chemical fertilizer­s are made largely from natural gas.

Ending Biden administra­tion restrictio­ns on domestic natural gas production, including opening up exploratio­n and production on federal lands and offshore, will help bring down fertilizer prices, according to Heritage Foundation agricultur­al experts Daren Bakst and Joshua Loucks.

Biden’s war on fossil fuels pushed up the cost of fertilizer before Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine. True, Russia is a fertilizer producer, but the war in Ukraine is merely making a self-imposed problem worse.

Reducing fertilizer costs is critical to making fruits and vegetables affordable but also meat. Feed prices for livestock and poultry went up 12.7% last year, largely because of soaring fertilizer prices. If feeding beef cattle costs less, steaks will, too.

Energy inflation drives up food prices in another way. Shipping goods within the U.S. costs nearly 25% more than a year ago, according to St. Louis Federal Reserve data, thanks to the trucker shortage but also fuel prices.

You’d think Biden would be bending over backward to tackle the food price crisis. Instead, he’s doubling down on climate extremism. Food shoppers be damned.

The federal Conservati­on Reserve Program pays farmers to leave farmland idle. Agricultur­al groups asked Secretary of Agricultur­e Tom Vilsack for permission to cultivate idle land, but Vilsack said no, predicting a “detrimenta­l impact on … efforts to mitigate climate change.”

Not all the factors pushing up food prices are within Biden’s control. Avian flu is ravaging poultry and egg producers. Drought is curbing production in California. Putin’s war is diminishin­g wheat production in Ukraine. But Biden has the power to tame food flation by standing up to the climate extremists in his own party.

He should also curb overall inflation by calling for tight monetary policy (the Federal Reserve’s job) and halting out-of-control federal spending, including shelving even a pared down Build Back Better.

Sadly, the president offered none of these remedies in his speech.

What can average Americans do? Shop smart. Those precooked supermarke­t chickens are loss leaders — a bargain designed to lure you into the store. They actually cost less than uncooked chicken, though they tend to be smaller.

You can vote smart, too. There’s a direct relationsh­ip between who governs in Washington and what you’re paying at the checkout.

 ?? AP FILE ?? BITTER TASTE: William Terry of Terry Farms in Oxnard, Calif., has been hit hard by fertilizer costs.
AP FILE BITTER TASTE: William Terry of Terry Farms in Oxnard, Calif., has been hit hard by fertilizer costs.

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