Sentinel & Enterprise

1970s wretched economy back to haunt Biden

The U. S. gross domestic product shrank 1.4% in the first quarter at the same time inflation continued to soar.

- — St. Louis Post-dispatch

For older Americans, that combinatio­n conjures memories of 1970s stagflatio­n, a nightmaris­h combinatio­n of double-digit inflation, double-digit interest rates, soaring gasoline prices and persistent­ly high unemployme­nt.

The entire economic mess got dumped on President Jimmy Carter’s lap after the 1976 election, even though it was neither his fault nor the fault of his predecesso­rs, Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon.

Sometimes, global economic forces converge just like weather systems to create a perfect storm, and woe to the president who gets caught in it. The timing of the current storm couldn’t be worse for President Biden as he tries to minimize the damage Democrats are bracing for in this year’s midterm elections.

Republican­s can be expected to rub Biden’s nose in bad economic data, but voters would be wise to study up on the facts rather than rely on political spin.

Biden inherited an economy still in pandemic shutdown mode. Manufactur­ers abroad, like here, had sent workers home and curtailed production to halt the spread of the coronaviru­s. Consumer spending plummeted.

Manufactur­ers sold off inventorie­s to meet whatever demand there was. Fuel prices had plummeted because motorists also were staying home.

Suddenly, vaccines allowed Americans to return to work, the highways and the stores just as Biden was settling into the White House.

A surge in demand for everything crashed against a production and cargo-transporta­tion bottleneck. Americans returned to their cars just as domestic and foreign oil producers opted to restrict output. Pump prices skyrockete­d.

Thus, inflation.

The decline in gross domestic product — in sharp contrast to the 6.9% increase in the first quarter of

Suddenly, vaccines allowed Americans to return to work ... (and) a surge in demand for everything crashed against a production and cargo-transporta­tion bottleneck. ... Thus, inflation.

2021 — reflects a decline in car sales because carmakers still can’t get the raw materials and microchips they need. Manufactur­ers, having reduced their inventorie­s, now are struggling to meet consumer demand. So their sales are dropping.

Thus, stagnation. Presidents Nixon, Ford and Carter grappled for years with the combinatio­n of a global economic contractio­n, two punishing Middle East oil embargoes, tens of thousands of troops returning from Vietnam and too few jobs to employ them. Biden, just like Carter and Nixon, also faced significan­t public blowback from military debacles abroad: Nixon’s messy Vietnam War pullout, Carter’s failed bid to rescue American hostages in Iran and Biden’s botched Afghanista­n withdrawal.

There’s no easy way for presidents to spin bad economic news other than to make clear that there is a bright side — such as Biden’s reminder Thursday that unemployme­nt rates haven’t been this low since 1970 — and to remind the public that presidents in free-market economies have minimal powers to halt inflation or force economic growth.

But a one-term presidency and midterm pain awaits any leader who tries to shrug off these factors or ignore the strains faced by American consumers (and voters).

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