South China Morning Post

BIDEN VOWS TO TACKLE RISING PRICES ‘HEAD ON’

Pledge in televised address comes after inflation hits 30-year peak and before he is expected to sign US$1.2tr infrastruc­ture package into law

- Agence France-Presse Additional reporting by Bloomberg

United States President Joe Biden has acknowledg­ed that American shoppers were paying too much for everyday goods, vowing to tackle inflation “head on” after government data showed it had reached a 30-year peak last month.

The sharp spike in the consumer price index (CPI) reported by the Labour Department surprised economists and the White House alike, and came as Biden headed to Baltimore to promote the US$1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture overhaul he argued could turn the tide.

“Today’s economic reports [show] unemployme­nt continuing to fall but consumer prices remaining too high,” Biden said in a televised address from the port of Baltimore on Wednesday.

He was in the east coast city to make the case that his infrastruc­ture package, passed by Congress last week, would bring down costs and reduce supply bottleneck­s.

“Looking out there, everything from a gallon of gas to a loaf of bread costs more,” Biden added.

“Even though wages are going up, we still face challenges and we have to tackle them. We have to tackle them head on.”

The White House said Biden would sign the infrastruc­ture package into law on Monday alongside lawmakers from both parties who helped write it and others who smoothed its path to the president’s desk.

US inflation had remained muted in recent years, but roared back with a vengeance in 2021 as American businesses began resuming normal operations with the help of Covid-19 vaccines.

Prices were pressured by high demand from consumers flush with cash, combined with shortages of US workers and snarls in supply chains worldwide that slowed deliveries of crucial components such as semiconduc­tors.

While Biden has argued that the increases will prove temporary, they have given his opponents a potent counter-argument to the spending plans he has staked his presidency on as his approval ratings sag.

“Spending trillions of more dollars on the Democrats’ tax and spending spree will only make the crisis Americans are facing worse,” Republican­s on the House Energy and Commerce Committee tweeted, dubbing the trend “Bidenflati­on”.

Biden scored a victory when Congress passed the infrastruc­ture overhaul last week, but his Build Back Better plan to strengthen America’s social safety net with a US$1.85 trillion investment over 10 years remains mired in infighting among his Democrats who narrowly control the legislatur­e. Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat who has objected to the plan’s cost, said on Twitter following the CPI report: “By all accounts, the threat posed by record inflation to the American people is not ‘transitory’ and is instead getting worse.”

The 6.2 per cent climb in the CPI compared to October 2020 was the sharpest annual increase since November 1990, and Mickey Levy of Berenberg Capital Markets said “price pressures have broadened”, with an array of goods and services seeing increases.

Compared to September, the CPI rose by 0.9 per cent, the Labour Department said, more than double the increase in the previous month and above forecasts from economists.

Much of the surge was seen in energy prices, with petrol soaring by 6.1 per cent last month alone, and fuel oil recording a 12.3 per cent increase. Grocery prices also climbed last month, with food at home rising by 1 per cent, while food away from home, such as meals at restaurant­s, saw a 0.8 per cent increase.

Used cars have seen an abnormal price surge throughout 2021 that bolstered overall inflation. After dipping in August and September, the report last month showed they again shot up by 2.5 per cent. Amid a nationwide housing shortage, housing costs – including rent – rose, with a 0.5 per cent increase in the shelter category. Food and energy prices are volatile, but even with those elements excluded, “core” CPI climbed by 0.6 per cent last month compared to the 0.2 per cent increase in September.

“I hate to say this but October’s core CPI is just a taster; the next few months are going to be horrible,” Ian Shepherdso­n of Pantheon Macroecono­mics tweeted.

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