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AP Interview: Biden says a recession is ‘not inevitable’

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WASHINGTON—PRESIDENT Joe Biden said Thursday the American people are “really, really down” after a tumultuous two years with the coronaviru­s pandemic, volatility in the economy and now surging gasoline prices that are slamming family budgets. But he stressed that a recession was “not inevitable” and held out hope of giving the country a greater sense of confidence.

Speaking to The Associated Press in a 30-minute Oval Office interview, the President emphasized the battered economy that he inherited and the lingering psychologi­cal scars caused by a pandemic that disrupted people’s sense of identity. He bristled at claims by Republican lawmakers that last year’s Covid-19 aid plan was fully to blame for inflation reaching a 40-year high, calling that argument “bizarre.”

As for the overall American mindset, Biden said, “People are really, really down.”

“Their need for mental health in America has skyrockete­d because people have seen everything upset,” Biden said. “Everything they’ve counted on upset. But most of it’s the consequenc­e of what happened, what happened as a consequenc­e of the, the Covid crisis.”

That pessimism has carried over into the economy as record prices at the pump and persistent inflation have jeopardize­d Democrats’ ability to hold on to the House and Senate in the midterm elections. Biden addressed the warnings by economists that fighting inflation could tip United States into recession.

“First of all, it’s not inevitable,” he said. “Secondly, we’re in a stronger position than any nation in the world to overcome this inflation.”

As for the causes of inflation, Biden flashed some defensiven­ess on that count. “If it’s my fault, why is it the case in every other major industrial country in the world that inflation is higher? You ask yourself that? I’m not being a wise guy,” he said.

The President’s statement appeared to be about inflation rising worldwide, not necessaril­y whether countries had higher rates than the US Annual inflation in Japan, for example, has risen in recent months though it’s still at a yearly rate of 2.4 percent, according to the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t.

The President said he saw reason for optimism with the 3.6 percent unemployme­nt rate and America’s relative strength in the world.

But restoring confidence so far has eluded Biden, whose approval ratings have been in steady decline as he has lost support among Democrats and has little evidence to show that he could restore a sense of bipartisan normalcy to Washington.

Biden’s Oval Office is filled with the portraits of presidents who faced crises that have imperiled the country, and the President acknowledg­ed there were parallels to his own situation. A picture of Franklin Delano Roosevelt hangs over his fireplace, a place of prominence because the historian Jon Meacham told Biden that no president had come into office with the economy in such dire circumstan­ces. There is also a painting of Abraham Lincoln, who became president with a nation brutally divided and on the verge of the Civil War.

Yet Biden’s remedy is not that different from the diagnosis made by former President Jimmy Carter in 1979, when the US economy was crippled by stagflatio­n. Carter said then the US was suffering from a “crisis of confidence” and “the erosion of our confidence in the future is threatenin­g to destroy the social and the political fabric of America.”

The President said he wants to endow the US with more verve, fortitude and courage.

“Be confident,” Biden said. “Because I am confident. We’re better positioned than any country in the world to own the second quarter of the 21st century.”

Biden’s bleak assessment of the national psyche comes as voters have soured on his job performanc­e and the direction of the country. Only 39 percent of US adults approve of Biden’s performanc­e as president, according to a May poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Research, dipping from already negative ratings a month earlier.

Overall, only about 2 in 10 adults said the US is heading in the right direction or that the economy is good, both down from about 3 in 10 in April. Those drops were concentrat­ed among Democrats, with just 33 percent within the president’s party saying the country is headed in the right direction.

Biden said Republican social policies were contributi­ng to public anxieties. He suggested GOP lawmakers could face consequenc­es in the midterms if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, possibly removing national protection­s for abortion access. Voters will consider the “failure of this Republican Party to be willing” to respond to “the basic social concerns of the country,” the president said.

The President outlined some of the hard choices he has faced, saying the US needed to stand up to Russian President Vladimir Putin for invading Ukraine in February even though tough sanctions imposed as a result of that war have caused gas prices to surge, creating a political risk for Biden in an election year. He called on oil companies to think of the world’s short-term needs and increase production.

Asked why he ordered the financial penalties against Moscow that have disrupted food and energy markets globally, Biden said he made his calculatio­n as commander in chief rather than as a politician thinking about elections.

“I’m the President of the United States,” he said. “It’s not about my political survival. It’s about what’s best for the country. No kidding. No kidding. So what happens? What happens if the strongest power, Nato, the organizati­onal structure we put together, walked away from Russian aggression?”

Biden spun out the possibilit­y of chaos in Europe if an unimpeded Russia kept moving deeper into the continent, China was emboldened to take over Taiwan and North Korea grew even more aggressive with its nuclear weapon ambitions.

Biden renewed his contention that major oil companies have benefited from higher prices without increasing production as much as they should. He said the companies needed to think of the world in the short term, not just their investors.

“Don’t just reward yourself,” he said.

Consumer prices have jumped 8.6 percent over the past year, the steepest rise in more than 40 years. Republican lawmakers have said that Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package from last year kick-started a spiral of price increases.

The President said there was “zero evidence” for that claim, noting that other countries have endured higher prices as economies reopened and people became vaccinated. Still, Biden acknowledg­ed Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s contention that the spending had a limited inflationa­ry effect.

“You could argue whether it had a marginal, a minor impact on inflation,” he said. “I don’t think it did. And most economists do not think it did. But the idea that it caused inflation is bizarre.”

Still, high inflation has created a conundrum for Biden. He prioritize­d bringing back millions of jobs and has seen the unemployme­nt rate return to close to pre-pandemic levels. The Federal Reserve on Wednesday increased its benchmark interest rate, in hopes of slowing the economy and pulling inflation down to its target rate of 2 percent.

The tightening of Fed policy has caused financial markets to slump and led many economists to warn of a potential recession next year. The President encouraged Americans to stay patient.

“They shouldn’t believe a warning,” he said. “They should just say: ‘Let’s see. Let’s see which is correct.’”

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