The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Biden and Republican­s suffer the same inflation delusion

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Republican­s, the media and even President

Joe Biden seem to be laboring under a common delusion: that presidents can control prices.

They can’t, inconvenie­nt though that may be for everyone involved.

Right-wing news media is full of segments about “Bidenflati­on,” suggesting Biden is personally responsibl­e for spiking gas, grocery and car prices. Even objective journalist­s have lobbed question after question to administra­tion officials about why the president hasn’t squelched inflation already.

Let me be abundantly clear: Prices, and the pace of price increases, are driven by factors mostly outside a president’s control. Particular­ly right now.

The global pandemic has disrupted supply chains here and abroad, including through worker shortages in factories, transporta­tion, warehousin­g and retail.

Meanwhile, Americans have accumulate­d a lot of savings. That’s partly because there were fewer things to spend money on while large portions of the economy were effectivel­y shuttered last year, and partly because the government provided generous fiscal support through several rounds of stimulus payments and other measures.

This cash is burning a hole in many consumers’ pockets. They’re eager to spend. So long as in-person services such as travel or concerts remain somewhat risky, consumers are diverting more of that spending to physical goods — that is, to precisely the same stuff that’s been snarled by global supply-chain disruption­s.

Higher demand + constraine­d supply = shortages and price spikes.

Much of the media coverage seems to assume Biden can pull some magic lever to make all these problems disappear. His inflation-fighting tools, though, are extremely limited.

He can continue some of the measures he’s already pursuing. That includes facilitati­ng coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns, both here and in poorer countries, so more people around the world can return to their normal work and purchasing behaviors. He’s also nudging ports and logistics companies to streamline operations and extend their hours.

There are other things the administra­tion hasn’t yet tried.

It could, for example, accelerate the processing of immigrants’ visas and work permits, which are severely backlogged and contributi­ng to worker shortages. Or Biden could release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, though that won’t affect prices much (the reserve is small, and energy is a big global market).

He could also repeal more tariffs. Biden recently ended Trumpera tariffs on European steel and aluminum, but he replaced those tariffs with a different kind of trade restrictio­n — a quota system — so it’s not clear how much the prices U.S. manufactur­ers pay for metals will actually decline.

These kinds of measures would help. But they’re no silver bullet. And in any event, the institutio­n tasked with maintainin­g price stability is not the White House or even Congress. It’s the politicall­y independen­t Federal Reserve.

Happily, the Fed has an effective medicine it could administer to kill inflation. Unhappily, that medicine — hiking interest rates — might also kill the patient. That is, it might halt the recovery and toss us back into recession. Which is also not exactly desirable.

For months, Democrats mainly dealt with the rising economic and political risk of inflation by playing down the phenomenon. They pretended that it didn’t exist or that concerns were vastly overblown. Democrats now argue that sure it’s real — and that, just as Republican­s have suggested all along, Biden can fix it!

The cure, Democrats argue, is passing their large safety-netand-climate bill. In truth, the bill’s likely effects on inflation are probably negligible, particular­ly in the near term. It’s unlikely to drive prices either dramatical­ly up (as Republican­s have baselessly fearmonger­ed) or dramatical­ly down (as Biden now questionab­ly promises).

The bill does lots of other good things, though, such as expanding access to health insurance coverage and investing in poor kids. Seems wiser to defend Biden’s agenda on the merits, rather than to pretend it will do something it won’t, and can’t.

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