Texarkana Gazette

Blaming Biden only goes so far in explaining inflation woes

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A new Internatio­nal Monetary Fund report suggests that the economic hiccups roiling American politics are actually being felt worldwide and probably have little or nothing to do with President Joe Biden’s leadership. Biden certainly isn’t blameless for at least a portion of the nation’s current inflationa­ry spiral, but the monetary fund’s report makes clear that the entire world would be in economic turmoil regardless.

Global annualized inflation ranges between 5.7% and 8.7% — suggesting that the United States, at 7% inflation, is far from alone in feeling the strains of the post-pandemic recovery. Adding to those global woes are shortages of petroleum and grains posed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The problems are likely to get worse before they get better, according to the World Economic Outlook report released last week.

Biden took office just as the pandemic was starting to subside worldwide. Before then, consumer spending had plummeted amid a worldwide shutdown. U.S. unemployme­nt rates peaked at 14.7% during the Trump administra­tion.

The widespread availabili­ty of coronaviru­s vaccines in early 2021 helped spur a return to pre-pandemic employment and consumer spending patterns. The global supply chain was nowhere near ready to meet the sudden surge in demand. Factories couldn’t ramp up fast enough. The cargo demand overwhelme­d shipping and trucking companies. Major ports backed up. But consumer demand kept surging, unabated, causing prices to skyrocket.

Motorists got back into their cars and hit the road again, leading to a sudden surge in demand for gasoline. Pump prices soared just as Russian leader Vladimir Putin decided to invade Ukraine. That prompted harsh internatio­nal sanctions that forced a dramatic cutoff of oil and natural gas exports from Russia, the world’s largest exporter.

Republican­s blame the price surge on Biden’s moves to review domestic pipeline plans and to delay some offshore drilling leases, but those decisions only affect production far in the future, not current supplies.

Biden did miscalcula­te in his assessment of the need for a greater U.S. economic stimulus as vaccines were rolling out. His $1.9 trillion stimulus package likely contribute­d to the inflationa­ry spiral. But the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund report makes clear that, in countries far beyond U.S. shores, the same inflationa­ry consequenc­es and energy shortages are occurring despite having nothing to do with Biden’s decision-making.

Much as Republican­s are trying to make Biden’s economic management the focus in their midterm campaignin­g, the reality is that he bears minimal responsibi­lity even though he’s taking all the blame.

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