USA TODAY International Edition

Analyzing Biden’s economic policies

He can boast, be roasted for different aspects

- Paul Davidson

In his State of the Union address Tuesday, President Joe Biden was expected to hail the economy’s resilience and booming labor market while omitting – or glossing over – some of its trouble spots.

“Put simply, I would argue the Biden economic plan is working,” Biden said Friday after January’s blockbuste­r 517,000 job gains were announced.

While inflation has eased somewhat and the labor market has remained remarkably sturdy, price increases are still historical­ly high, the housing market is in a tailspin and most economists are forecastin­g a recession this year.

“The economy is solid, but inflation is too high and recession risks are elevated,” says Gus Faucher, chief economist of PNC Financial Services Group.

Here’s a look at the economy’s strengths and weak spots:

Strengths

Unemployme­nt fell to 54- year low: Job growth has slowed but stayed astonishin­gly strong despite the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes aimed at discouragi­ng business hiring and investment to curtail inflation.

Average monthly job growth downshifte­d to 291,000 in the last three months of 2022 from 423,000 the previous quarter, but that’s still a robust performanc­e. For all of last year, U. S. employers added 4.8 million jobs, second most behind the 7.3 million added in 2021.

And unemployme­nt fell to a 54- year low of 3.4% in January.

Biden deserves credit for spearheadi­ng the $ 1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which further juiced the economy as the U. S. was still emerging from the COVID- 19 pandemic in March 2021, Faucher says.

But the massive job gains can also

be traced to the nation’s 22 million job losses in the spring of 2020 during the pandemic’s early days. Businesses such as restaurant­s, bars, shops and hotels laid off so many workers they had lots of room for a comeback.

Inflation rate is slowing: Annual inflation eased to 6.5% in December from 7.1% the previous month and a 40- year high of 9.1% in June.

Economists largely cite easing supply chain bottleneck­s and product shortages, as well as the declining price of commoditie­s such as oil, corn and wheat amid global recession fears.

Yet Biden gets kudos for drawing down 180 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve when gasoline prices were topping out at a record $ 5 a gallon in June, Faucher says.

Consumer spending has held up:

Consumer spending slowed last year after a sizzling 2021. But it still grew a solid 2.8% despite soaring inflation and the Fed’s largest bump in interest rates in four decades, which was aimed at damping household outlays to curb price increases.

Faucher partly credits Biden’s American Rescue Plan, which sent $ 1,400 checks to most individual­s in March 2021. COVID- 19 stimulus checks, which began under the Trump administra­tion, along with savings amassed during COVID- 19 lockdowns, bolstered Americans’ pandemic- related cash reserves to $ 2.6 trillion.

Their finances, though, already were in good shape. Household debt was at a historical­ly low 9.7% of disposable income in the third quarter.

Business investment has been solid: Business spending on computers, factory machines, trucks and other goods was also solid last year, growing 3.6%, despite rising interest rates as companies responded to healthy consumer demand.

Weaknesses

Inflation is still high: Although inflation has eased to 6.5%, that’s still the highest level since 1982, excluding the current bout of price run- ups that began in spring 2021.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has noted that while goods price increases have moderated, lowering inflation for the long term will mean slowing wage growth in service industries such as health and education – which could be a thornier challenge.

Biden gets praise for giving consumers a financial cushion, he also gets some blame for contributi­ng to inflation in the first place with the $ 1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, Faucher says. The extra cash, he says, helped set off a spending spree that likely contribute­d to inflation.

Housing market is in a deep slump: In December, the number of homes that builders started to construct fell for the fourth straight month and existing home sales declined for the 11th consecutiv­e month to the lowest level since 2010.

Economists trace the slump to Fed rate increases that drove up mortgage rates from 3% in early 2022 to 7% before a recent pullback to 6.1%. The Fed’s hiking campaign was triggered by high inflation spurred partly by Biden’s stimulus bill.

Home prices, meanwhile, likely have peaked and economists expect declines of up to 15% this year.

Less housing constructi­on means fewer jobs for workers and less investment in the economy. And lower home prices reduce household wealth, hurting consumer spending.

Manufactur­ing is contractin­g: High interest rates have similarly hurt manufactur­ing as businesses buy goods when borrowing costs are high.

Manufactur­ing activity declined for a third straight month in January.

Part of the reason for the industry’s troubles is unrelated to Biden’s policies. Consumers who bought TVs, appliances and furniture during the pandemic have shifted their purchases to services such as traveling and going to the theater.

Most economists say a recession is likely: Although consumer spending and business investment grew solidly in 2022, they began to weaken late last year as inflation and Fed rate hikes took a growing toll. Most economists expect a mild recession this year, according to those surveyed by Wolters Kluwer Blue Chip Economic Indicators.

After the nation’s gross domestic product grew 2.8% in 2022 – based on averaging the four quarters – Faucher expects GDP to be flat this year as the nation loses about 2 million jobs.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/ AP ?? Unemployme­nt fell to a 54- year low of 3.4% in January.
NAM Y. HUH/ AP Unemployme­nt fell to a 54- year low of 3.4% in January.

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