Loveland Reporter-Herald

Democrats are working through the five stages of inflation grief

- Catherine Rampell

Democrats are working through the five stages of grief when it comes to inflation — and, by extension, their midterm prospects.

On some economic metrics, Democrats have much to celebrate heading into the midterms. The U.S. economy will likely soon recover all the jobs lost during the pandemic recession ... Yet an abundance of jobs is less impressive to voters when even rising wages fall behind the soaring cost of living.

Recent polls show President Joe Biden deeply underwater on his handling of the economy and inflation. Americans trust Republican­s more on both — even though Republican­s have offered little in the way of a plan to reduce inflation. Shouting “Socialism!” over and over doesn’t count.

But Republican­s have at least been acknowledg­ing the problem exists, and has unsettled voters, for far longer than Democrats have. Until quite recently, Democrats were in denial — the first stage of grief, per pop-psychology tropes — that inflation presented a serious concern economical­ly or politicall­y.

For months, politician­s and left-wing commentato­rs mocked media coverage about how regular people experience­d or perceived rising prices. They argued that inflation concerns were exaggerate­d by Republican­s and Fox News to distract from the job-market boom . ...

To be fair to Biden officials: In the first half of 2021, it wasn’t unusual to assume that inflation could fade on its own as the economy reopened and supply chains untangled themselves. Most profession­al forecaster­s and economic commentato­rs (myself included!) expected something along these lines to happen. But as the year wore on, supply remained severely constraine­d, and consumer demand remained red-hot, in part thanks to expansiona­ry fiscal and monetary policy. Key inflation measures continued rising. It became harder to continue calling inflation merely “transitory.”

Biden began telling voters he felt their pain, and he issued some (largely symbolic) measures that he said would bring down prices . ...

But the administra­tion dragged its feet in deploying what modest tools it had available to actually combat high prices and bottleneck­s — such as removing Trump-era tariffs, processing backlogged immigratio­n applicatio­ns and work permits, or even naming Federal Reserve nominees to vacant slots.

If inflation would soon fade on its own anyway, the administra­tion might have thought, there was little urgency to take serious action.

By late fall and early winter, the party graduated to the next grieving stage: anger.

Democrats stopped denying inflation was real. They moved on to righteous fury. The problem, they declared, wasn’t that policymake­rs had run the economy a little too hot — nor even that we’d been struck by some unlucky supply shocks.

It was that heinous villain Corporate Greed at work . ...

Democrats are still pushing some punitive (and arguably counterpro­ductive) measures. But lately some have also adopted the next stage of grief: bargaining.

Maybe Biden and his fellow Democrats can win back some economic favorabili­ty points, and be seen as helping struggling families afford the rising cost of living, if only he forgives most or all student debt. Pretty please? Maybe? So Democrats plead with voters, and Biden surrogates argue on TV.

Never mind that poorly targeted student debt forgivenes­s might accidental­ly increase inflationa­ry pressures. Or that the politics of a broad-based debt jubilee are not an obvious slam-dunk.

Maybe Democrats could revive some crowd-pleasing portion of Build Back Better. Or they could pretend Donald Trump is already back on the ballot again. Would any of those measures persuade voters to forgive them any flaws in the economy? At this point, it seems unlikely...

According to the usual taxonomy, two stages of grief remain. The next, depression, seems to be already creeping up on some Democrats, as they openly despair over the darkening economic outlook and what it portends for their midterm chances. Acceptance of those election results might not be far behind.

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