Houston Chronicle

Biden’s shifts away from talk of inflation

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden has stopped talking so much about inflation worries.

His remarks in Columbus, Ohio, in suburban Washington at a Democratic fundraiser, at a Cabinet meeting and in Labor Day speeches in Milwaukee and Pittsburgh were all missing a once-common refrain about families at the kitchen table straining under the rising costs of food and gasoline.

It’s a self-edit ahead of the midterm elections in November, prompted in part by the easing of inflationa­ry pressures. But Biden is also attempting to shift the spotlight to his legislativ­e wins, the loss of abortion protection­s and the threats he says are posed to democracy by the many Republican leaders still under the sway of former President Donald Trump.

When Biden did address inflation in a Monday speech at Boston’s airport, he stressed progress, rather than financial pain on what he says is his top economic priority. Biden has largely put the blame for inflation on global forces such as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s February invasion of Ukraine, even as he says his own policies are reducing the burdens of higher prices.

“We’re on the right track,” the president said Monday, noting the lower gas costs but adding the caveat: “There’s more to do, a lot more to do.”

Prices at the pump are averaging $3.72 a gallon, after having crested above $5 a gallon in midJune, and the president’s approval ratings have recovered somewhat. Yet inflation still remains a challenge.

The government on Tuesday will release its consumer prices report for August, with economists surveyed by FactSet expecting annual inflation to be at 8.1 percent. That’s down from the 40-year peak of 9.1 percent in June, but it’s well above the Federal Reserve’s target of 2 percent.

“The most public price — gasoline — has been falling significan­tly,” said Austan Goolsbee, a University of Chicago economist and former Obama White House aide. “In that kind of environmen­t, other concerns tend to move up on people’s lists. That could certainly change if the inflation numbers start getting worse.”

A senior White House official, insisting on anonymity on a Thursday call with reporters, said recent trends in inflation have given the administra­tion some guarded optimism. The White House is banking on the possibilit­y that interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve will lead inflation down to pre-pandemic levels without sacrificin­g the job gains of the past 18 months.

“The Fed is going to need great skill and also some good luck to achieve what we sometimes call a soft landing,” Treasury Secretary

Janet Yellen said Sunday on CNN. “I believe there is a path to accomplish­ing that.”

Still, many leading economists, including researcher­s who presented this week at the Brookings Institutio­n, warn that bringing down inflation will likely mean layoffs and a drastic rise in the unemployme­nt rate despite Biden’s hopes.

There is a risk for Biden in pivoting away from discussing inflation, said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an economist who has advised Republican campaigns and is now president of the center-right American Action Forum. HoltzEakin noted that oil prices have largely fallen as demand from China has waned, something that could reverse in October if that country lifts it coronaviru­s lockdowns.

He said that Democratic fortunes could ultimately rest on the movements of global energy markets with their mix of geopolitic­s, corporate profits and financial speculatio­n.

“They do this at their peril,” Holtz-Eakin said about the change in messaging. “When you look at the numbers, there really has not been great progress on inflation. Everything they’ve gotten on inflation has been driven by internatio­nal conditions and global oil prices.”

Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers are trying to keep voters focused on the GOP version. They say Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package and resistance to oil drilling leases has led to inflation, although prices are rising worldwide because of the pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and troubled supply chains.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell noted the financial pain being felt by manufactur­ers, farmers and constructi­on firms in his home state of Kentucky.

“Washington Democrats have spent nearly two years borrowing, printing, and spending our economy into turmoil,” McConnell said in a Wednesday speech to the Senate. “Since President Biden took office, prices in (Kentucky) have spiked by 13 percent.”

That figure cited by McConnell comes from Republican­s on Congress’ Joint Economic Committee. It’s higher than the inflation numbers seen by most Americans because it’s over the span of Biden’s presidency, rather than the annual rate that commonly gets cited.

White House officials still describe inflation as Biden’s top economic priority. The administra­tion released a 58-page economic blueprint last Friday that details its work on infrastruc­ture, climate change, computer chip production and other policies.The blueprint said that going forward, “The president’s nearterm priority when it comes to the labor market is bringing down inflation without giving up the substantia­l progress we’ve made for American workers.”

But the president has also gone on the political offensive regarding inflation, noting that the GOP opposed the law he signed last month that limits prescripti­on drug prices, funds climaterel­ated investment­s, raises corporate taxes and reduces the federal budget deficit.

Biden says the measure, which Democrats call the “Inflation Reduction Act,” will help to lower prices, although outside analyses suggest the impact could be negligible.

“You think if they really cared about inflation — reducing it — they would have voted for the Inflation Reduction Act,” Biden said in his Thursday speech at a Democratic fundraiser. “Every Republican in the House, every Republican in the Senate, they voted against it. Everyone.”

 ?? Alex Brandon/Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden has eased talk about inflation, shifting the spotlight to his legislativ­e wins and criticizin­g radical threats to democracy.
Alex Brandon/Associated Press President Joe Biden has eased talk about inflation, shifting the spotlight to his legislativ­e wins and criticizin­g radical threats to democracy.

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