East Bay Times

California­ns giving Biden little credit for economy

Lingering inflation has damaged voter perception­s

- By Don Lee

As President Biden struggles to sell Bidenomics to skeptical voters, he's facing the all-too-real consequenc­es of stubbornly higher inflation, but he's also battling human psychology.

And both of those factors may be especially strong in California.

Most economists agree that the American economy during Biden's presidency has made a remarkable recovery from the pandemic. And it continues to outperform expectatio­ns, even if California isn't doing quite as well. But polls have consistent­ly shown that the public by and large holds a negative view of the economy and, by extension, Biden's handling of it.

While partisan politics, pandemic hangover and other factors have colored people's attitudes, experts say inflation appears to be the single biggest economic albatross for Biden.

He entered office with an approval rating of 57%, but in Gallup's latest poll in March that number was 40%, with his handling of the economy perceived as one of his biggest weaknesses.

This even though the rate of inflation has come down significan­tly from earlier highs and the incomes of Americans, on average, have risen to equal or often exceed the higher costs for most goods and services.

Wednesday the government reported that inflation, as measured by U.S. consumer prices, edged up in March to 3.5% from a year ago. It was a little higher than expected, driven partly by bigger price increases for transporta­tion, electricit­y and medical services. Food inflation was subdued, but shelter and energy prices still are running a bit too hot

Although the rate of inflation has declined since hitting a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022, it's still well above the Federal Reserve's 2% target, which could delay a much hoped-for cut in interest rates.

What's more, experts say the slowdown in inflation isn't what most people notice. Nor do they seem as relieved by the seemingly encouragin­g decline in inflation from 2022 as economists are. After all, it's not that prices have fallen dramatical­ly; they're just not rising as fast as before.

That's where basic elements of human nature come in, some economists and other analysts say: Consumers instinctiv­ely pay more attention to the dollars they have to shell out than they do to the increases in their paychecks.

That's especially true when the purchases are for everyday items such as gasoline, for which prices in California are higher than elsewhere in the continenta­l United States.

Today, U.S. consumers are paying 20% more for milk,

Inflation “creates a new set of circumstan­ces and anxiety in California, where housing and the cost of living is a major concern, especially for lower-income but also middle-income and younger California­ns.” - Mark Baldassare, Public Policy Institute of California

about 30% more for bread and more than 50% more for eggs than they were in February 2020, just before the COVID-19 pandemic began, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics report Wednesday.

Rents are up more than 20% from pre-pandemic levels and electricit­y costs about 30% more.

For California­ns, even with wage gains matching or exceeding consumer price increases, higher inflation may have an even stronger real and psychologi­cal impact because the state is so much more expensive to begin with.

“They worry whether inflation is coming back,” said Mark Baldassare, the statewide survey director at the Public Policy Institute of California. “It creates a new set of circumstan­ces and anxiety in California, where housing and the cost of living is a major concern, especially for lower-income but also middle-income and younger California­ns.”

In a statewide survey he conducted last fall, Baldassare found that a growing percentage of California­ns were “not too happy” (26% compared with 20% in 2011 and 13% in 1998). And among the groups who are the least happy: 18-to-34year-olds; renters; and those with household incomes of $40,000 or less.

Nationwide, prices for all goods and services have jumped about 20% over the last four years. And it's been an especially startling jolt to many consumers because the vast majority of them had never experience­d anything like it in their adult lives.

The last time inflation was at or near double-digits was in the early 1980s, and for most of the last 30 years it's been close to the Federal Reserve's 2% target.

“Part of the story is not just that we've had high inflation, but we've had high inflation with a generation that's ill-equipped to deal with it,” said Justin Wolfers, professor of public policy and economics at the University of Michigan. “Young people today might think prices have risen by 20% and no one's ever going to make me whole.”

But, in fact, Wolfers noted, gains in wages and salaries, on average, have actually outpaced inflation since the pandemic, with lowerincom­e workers seeing the highest percentage gains.

Older people who went through substantia­l inflation before may have learned that it usually turns out to be a temporary problem: For at least the last half-century, when the cost of living has risen sharply, so have workers' incomes, though not immediatel­y.

Older generation­s understand the dynamic: “Inflation takes away with higher prices and then it gives back with higher wages,” Wolfers said.

In California, workers on average earned $1,595 a week in the third quarter of 2023, the latest available data from BLS. That's 23% higher than the same quarter in 2019.

And it's about 5 percentage points higher than the increase in prices over a similar period in California, based on data from the state's Department of Finance.

But even though average paychecks have now matched or exceeded price increases — meaning most consumers' purchasing power has not been eroded, Wolfers and other economists say — that's not the way people process things.

When prices go up sharply, people get upset, thinking it unfair and unjust, and looking at the government or someone else to blame. But if their wages go up by just as much, people tend to “externaliz­e” the increase, feeling they earned it, although in reality the bigger paycheck is largely the result of higher prices — and the resulting ability of employers to pay their employees more.

That psychology presents a big challenge for Biden, since it takes time for consumers to get over what they've internaliz­ed about high inflation. And although California will probably not be in play in November's presidenti­al balloting, the downcast mood of many residents due to inflation may only be magnified because the state's economy has been lagging behind the nation.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES ?? A customer shops at a grocery store March 12in San Rafael. Consumers are paying 20% more for milk than in 2020.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES A customer shops at a grocery store March 12in San Rafael. Consumers are paying 20% more for milk than in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States