Baltimore Sun

Negative report on economy blunts Biden’s pitch to voters

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s upbeat message that the economy is cruising along hit a troublesom­e speed bump on Thursday when the federal government reported that U.S. gross domestic product shrank during the first three months of 2022.

Economic activity declined at annual rate of 1.4%, a sharp reversal from last year when growth was the strongest since 1984. There were technical reasons for the decline that likely obscured the actual health of the economy, yet the drop clearly put the president on the defensive after he has said repeatedly that the booming job market means the U.S. can withstand inflation at a 40-year high.

Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package was supposed to propel the economy to new heights that Democrats could then sell to voters in this year’s midterm elections. But the muddled data has weakened the clarity of Biden’s pitch and emboldened Republican criticism.

The president told reporters at the White House that the consumer spending and business investment portions of the GDP report were solid, evidence that growth should resume in the months to come. The biggest drag on GDP was an increase in imports, but a one-off glitch — a sharp drop in business inventorie­s — was a key contributo­r to the overall drop. The inventory decline reflected the aftershock­s of the pandemic, rather than the underlying health of the economy, Biden said.

“What you’re seeing is enormous growth in the country that was affected by everything from COVID and the COVID blockages that occurred along the

way,” Biden said.

While the president maintained there would not be a recession this year, he conceded it was a concern.

Following last year’s coronaviru­s relief package, the government is now trying to calm the economy. There is less fiscal support as the federal deficit will likely be lower this year. At the same time, the Federal Reserve is trying to raise benchmark interest rates to reduce inflation without causing a downturn.

But Thursday’s report gave Republican lawmakers a direct line of attack.

“Under President Biden’s leadership, our economy is actually shrinking,” Texas Rep. Kevin Brady said at the start of a House Ways & Means Committee hearing Thursday. “The president has missed four of the five quarterly economic projection­s. So Americans ought to brace for slower job growth and higher prices ahead.”

What the GDP report actually reveals about the months ahead may be more complicate­d. Some economists see the consumer spending and business investment as signs of a quick rebound, while others fear that consumer spending could weaken because of high prices and the efforts to reduce inflation.

“Underlying demand

remains strong, and the labor market is in excellent shape,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist of PNC Financial Services. “Growth will resume in the second quarter.”

One senior White House official said the various disruption­s of the past two years have hurt the reliabilit­y of traditiona­l economic indicators, masking what the administra­tion sees as a solid economy.

The official, who insisted on anonymity to discuss the GDP report, said the key to overcoming this challenge will be to get the American people to focus on the bigger picture instead of monthly and quarterly reports.

On Thursday afternoon, Biden tried to pull attention back to that bigger picture by inviting small business owners to the White House. He noted that Americans have emerged from the pandemic as more entreprene­urial with 5.4 million applying last year to start new businesses. That’s 20% higher than any other year on record.

“We have every indication that this trend is going to continue,” Biden said. “The reason for that is because we’re giving people financial security to take a risk and pursue their small business dreams.”

 ?? JIM WATSON/GETTY-AFP ?? Hours after a troubling economic report was released, President Joe Biden meets with small business owners on Thursday at the White House.
JIM WATSON/GETTY-AFP Hours after a troubling economic report was released, President Joe Biden meets with small business owners on Thursday at the White House.

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