The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Can president spend big and control inflation?

- Gregory Bresiger is the author of a history of Social Security, “The Revolution of 1935.” He wrote this for InsideSour­ces. com.

President Joe Biden is expressing confidence that his proposed $4.5 trillion domestic package will effectivel­y pay for itself even as experts fear the mammoth price tag may trigger long-term inflation and other economic disruption­s.

At a press conference earlier this month, the Democratic president argued that his plan—a dual measure that would spend on both infrastruc­ture and broader domestic policy—will generate new jobs and new federal revenue while leading to lower consumer prices.

“My Build Back Better plan will be a force for achieving low prices for Americans looking ahead,” the president said, arguing that it “will enhance our productivi­ty — raising wages without raising prices.”

“That won’t increase inflation,” he claimed. “It will take the pressure off of inflation, give a boost to our workforce, which leads to lower prices in the years ahead.”

The Biden plan includes spending to repair roads and bridges, transit projects, school buildings, and hospitals, as well as outlays for green energy spending and domestic manufactur­ing. “Simply put, we can’t afford not to make these investment­s,” the president stated.

Yet Biden’s sunny outlook has lately been belied in part by an inflation rate that, at least compared to recent years, is abnormally high.

This month the Labor Department reported consumer prices in June rose 0.9 percent from May and 5.4 percent over the past year.

The Bureau called these data “the largest 1-month change since June 2008” and the largest yearly increase since August of 2008, respective­ly.

Echoing the Bureau of Labor’s less-than-sunny numbers, several skeptics argue the Biden policy will have the opposite effect that the president intends, driving up inflation rates while plowing money into needless government spending.

Mark Skousen, an investment researcher and an economics professor at Chapman University in Orange, Calif., has argued Biden’s proposal would repeat the policy mistakes of the 1970s when interest rates rose in some cases to over 20 percent amid stratosphe­ric inflation.

“I expect price inflation to rise to 4 percent or more in the coming years, based on today’s policies,” Skousen recently wrote on his blog.

He called the plan “a monstrosit­y.” The president, Skousen contended, proposes enormous spending on various “government boondoggle­s” such as “green energy” and “universal childcare.”

Florida Republican Sen.

Rick Scott offered a similar assessment. “As Joe Biden’s inflation crisis rages, he just can’t stop fueling it with more reckless government spending,” he told Inside Sources in a statement.

“Americans are experienci­ng 1970s-style inflation again, and it’s because of Joe Biden’s failed economic policies.”

Even some Democratic voices are questionin­g the wisdom of sky-high levels of spending. “[W]hile continuing relief efforts are essential, the focus of our macroecono­mic policy needs to change,” former Clinton administra­tion economic advisor Larry Summers recently wrote in The Washington Post.

“The primary risk to the United States economy is overheatin­g—and inflation,” he said, arguing in favor of the “reprogramm­ing of Rescue Plan funds” to finance current infrastruc­ture plans.

Earlier in the year, Summers warned that Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID relief package was “the least responsibl­e macroecono­mic policy we’ve had in the last 40 years,” claiming it might “destabiliz­e” the economy and that the U.S. could be in for “stagflatio­n” in the near future.

Jason Furman, meanwhile— chairman of former President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers—recently told Bloomberg that Biden’s earlier COVID stimulus, passed in March, was “too big for the moment,” and that he “[didn’t] know any economist that was recommendi­ng something the size of what was done.”

For decades, economists of all background­s have warned against policies that might reignite the economic turmoil of the 1970s and early 1980s, when three successive presidenti­al administra­tions were all plagued by crushing economic issues. Those years were marked by double-digit inflation, slow growth, and massive deficits.

Offering a somewhat more sanguine assessment, Christophe­r Russo, a research fellow at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center, argued that regardless of the Biden administra­tion’s policy ambitions, the Federal Reserve will seek to keep annual inflation at two percent or less a year, tempering what critics warn may be the fallout from excessive White House policies.

“The Fed understand­s the lesson of the 1970s and I believe they will make the right call as long as they retain their political independen­ce,” he said.

 ??  ?? Gregory Bresiger
Gregory Bresiger

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