Times-Herald

Republican­s point to inflation in bid to retake Congress

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Gas prices have whizzed past $3 per gallon in much of the nation. The cost of used cars and new furniture, airline tickets, department store blouses, ground beef and a Chipotle burrito are on the rise, too.

Many economists say the price increases are fueled by the aftereffec­ts of a global pandemic and probably won't last. But Republican­s are hoping to storm into next year's midterm elections arguing that steep government spending under President Joe Biden and a Democratic­controlled Congress has triggered inflation that will ultimately hurt everyday Americans.

The economic reality is more complicate­d. Still, with Republican­s only needing to pick up a handful of seats to regain the

House and Senate, the party increasing­ly sees the prospect of sustained higher prices as a way to connect policies made in Washington with the experience­s of voters whose pocketbook­s may be feeling the strain.

Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., said his constituen­ts have "seen the higher prices on gas in particular, but also groceries and the cost to keep their businesses running." Such voters, he said, "know, intuitivel­y, that this is due to Democrats' economic agenda and big spending plans."

Consumer prices rose 5% over the previous 12 months, the largest one-year increase since 2008. Excluding more volatile items such as food and energy, prices were up 3.8% over the past year -- the biggest 12-month jump since 1992.

Those leaps were driven by comparison­s to the pandemic-hampered 2020 economy, but nonetheles­s show prices climbing sharply, with the cost of used cars rising 7.3% in May and food costs increasing nearly half a percentage point over the same period. Gas prices have risen from a nationwide average of $2.48 to $3.13 per gallon under Biden, the first time since 2014 that it has topped the $3 threshold.

Former Federal Reserve economist Claudia Sahm said this year's inflation rates are likely to remain far higher than usual, but that's chiefly due to the the pandemic pushing inflation uncommonly low last year. There's also a boom in consumer spending due to pent-up demand as the virus recedes and the lingering effects of disruption­s to global supply chain, she said.

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