The Oakland Press

Biden aims to do what presidents often can’t: Beat inflation

- By Paul Wiseman, Cathy Bussewitz and Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON » LBJ tried jawboning. Richard Nixon issued a presidenti­al edict. The Ford administra­tion printed buttons exhorting Americans to “Whip Inflation Now.”

Over the years, American presidents have tried, and mostly floundered, in their efforts to quell the economic and political menace of consumer inflation.

Now, President Joe Biden is giving it a shot.

Confrontin­g a spike in gasoline and other consumer prices that’s bedeviling American households, Biden on Tuesday ordered the release of 50 million barrels of oil from the U.S strategic petroleum reserve. The move, done in coordinati­on with several other major nations, is intended to contain energy costs. Oil markets, having anticipate­d the move, were unimpresse­d with the details: Oil prices actually rose on the news.

It was just the latest step Biden has taken to show he is doing everything he can to combat inflation as gasoline and food prices, in particular, have imposed a growing burden on American households. On Monday, he announced that he would reappoint Jerome Powell as chair of the Federal Reserve, a move meant in part to reassure financial markets that Washington is serious about containing consumer prices. Last month, he announced a deal to ease supply backlogs at the Port of Los Angeles by extending operations there to 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Yet none of the president’s actions is considered likely to make a meaningful dent in surging prices anytime soon.

“I don’t think the president has many levers to pull to bring down the rate of inflation any time soon,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “The things he is doing are positive, and there’s no downside to them ... but they are on the margins. They’re not going to move the dial very much.”

Inflation is always a tough foe, made even more complicate­d by the unusual recovery from the pandemic recession, with shortages of supplies and workers and shipping bottleneck­s forcing up prices.

What is happening to consumer prices?

The government’s consumer price index skyrockete­d 6.2% in the 12 months that ended in October — the sharpest such jump since 1990.

Coming after nearly four decades of more or less stable prices, the CPI news represents a “once-in-ageneratio­n uptick in inflation,” said Sarah Binder, a George Washington University political scientist who studies the Fed. “The problem is pretty stark because it’s something that voters notice. It’s hard to escape the impact of a spike in inflation on your daily life, whether it’s buying milk or buying gas.”

The average price of regular gasoline has shot up to $3.40 a gallon from $2.11 a year ago, according to AAA.

Compoundin­g the pain and heightenin­g the pressure on Biden, inflation has been outpacing Americans’ income. Adjusted for price increases, average hourly wages were actually down 1.2% last month compared with a year earlier.

“Inflation is painful, and it’s always political,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at the accounting and consulting firm Grant Thornton.

What can presidents do?

The White House has limited tools for reversing higher prices. That task belongs more to the Fed, which can raise borrowing costs to cool a sizzling economy. During the 1960s and 1970s, though, presidents increasing­ly felt pressure to do something about inflation because it had become a serious political threat.

President Lyndon Johnson tried to persuade companies to forgo price increases and labor unions to limit wage demands — a practice known as “jawboning.” When Bethlehem Steel raised steel prices in 1965, Johnson criticized its executives as unpatrioti­c, and they backed down, according to Robert Samuelson’s book, “The Great Inflation and Its Aftermath.” When egg prices rose in 1966, Johnson ordered America’s surgeon general to highlight the health hazards of cholestero­l in eggs, with the intent of lowering egg sales and therefore prices.

Nixon imposed wage and price controls in 1971 and 1973, which briefly stifled inflation, only to see prices soar once the controls were lifted.

Gerald Ford’s “Whip Inflation Now” program encouraged Americans to grow their own vegetables, reduce their food waste and consume less. Americans responded mostly by mocking the program. Some wore the president’s WIN buttons upside down, explaining that the resulting NIM stood for “No Immediate Miracles.”

What has Biden done?

Biden last week signed into a law a $1 trillion public works program, which pours money into fixing roads, bridges and ports, potentiall­y easing the supply chain backlogs that have contribute­d to rising prices. Untangling shipping bottleneck­s would be doubly helpful: It would ease inflationa­ry pressures and boost the economy by increasing the flow of goods to customers.

Last week, Biden sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission asking the FTC chair to consider investigat­ing whether higher gasoline prices were the result of “illegal conduct.” The White House is also stepping up anti-trust enforcemen­t of the meatpackin­g industry, seeking to increase competitio­n and drive down meat prices.

His decision to re-nominate Powell to lead the Fed was meant, in part, to reassure the financial markets of Washington’s resolve to prevent consumer prices from spiraling out of his control. The other likely contender for the job — Lael Brainard, a member of the Fed’s Board of Governors — was perceived as less hawkish toward inflation.

Why did Biden tap the strategic petroleum reserve Tuesday?

The idea was that by putting more oil on the market, prices would fall. That hasn’t happened. But depending on what happens in the rest of the world, there’s still a chance it could work.

America’s petroleum reserve holds about 605 million barrels of oil in undergroun­d caves in Texas and Louisiana. It was designed in the 1970s in response to the Arab oil embargo to store oil in case there was a supply disruption or emergency. But the dynamics of the global oil industry changed dramatical­ly in recent years, and now the U.S exports more oil than it imports.

The 50 million barrels that Biden promised to release will likely be sold slowly, at a rate of about 1 million barrels per day, meaning that the new influx of oil could last about two months. Adding even a small amount of oil to the market can tip it into surplus, and potentiall­y lower the price, said Jim Burkhard of IHS Markit.

“The immediate price reaction is not the final judgment on the effectiven­ess of this of the effort,” he added. “It will really be in the months ahead.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fuel prices are posted at a filling station in Willow Grove, Pa., on Tuesday. The White House on Tuesday said it had ordered 50million barrels of oil released from strategic reserve to bring down energy costs.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fuel prices are posted at a filling station in Willow Grove, Pa., on Tuesday. The White House on Tuesday said it had ordered 50million barrels of oil released from strategic reserve to bring down energy costs.

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