Bidenomics, Bidenflation
Stop complaining and just vote for the old man...
NO, Joke Biden didn't invent inflation, writes Sean Ring in Addison
Wiggin's Daily
Reckoning.
But he inadvertently attached his name to it, much like Jimmy Carter did in the 1970s.
A few months ago, Greg
Ip wrote the most condescendingly asinine article The Wall Street Journal ever had the misfortune to
publish.
In "What's Wrong With the Economy? It's You, Not the Data," Ip alleged The Great Unwashed™ were too
stupid to realize how good
everything was under Dear Leader Potatohead Biden.
Ip wrote:
"Yes, some individuals
faced higher inflation (someone who bought a house, for instance) but, for the average person, inflation
went down.
"When it comes to the economy, the vibes are at war with the facts, and the vibes are
winning. This is obviously bad news
for President Biden's re-election hopes. He can't exactly tell voters that they are wrong; he would be
called out of touch. And it
probably wouldn't change anything. The vibes seem symptomatic of a broader pessimism disconnected from
the data."
It's tempting to chalk this up to a misunderstanding. Lower inflation means the level of
prices is still rising, just
more slowly than before. People sometimes conflate inflation with the level of prices and believe
inflation is getting worse because
the price level keeps going up (it rarely goes down).
The thing is, Ippie
thinks you should care more about
the math than your wallet. Sure, inflation can fall (disinflation) while prices keep rising, and
deflation (falling prices) only
happens in industries where the government can't get its paw in the jar. But the government policy
counts, not the fact you can't buy
steak next month, according to Ip.
Idiotic.
If a
product cost $1 two years ago, and
last year's inflation was 10%, and this year's is 5% (year-on-year): yes, inflation fell 50%. But it
also means that the product cost
$1.10 last year and $1.16 today.
That's much more expensive (16%) for the lower
and middle classes, as food,
shelter, and energy costs eat up a lot more of their wallets than those of rich folk.
So, of course, they –
the hoi polloi – are upset at Biden. But more compelling evidence has come out lately.
Here's a pro tip from
Seanie: never attach your name to something when you believe in nothing.
Joke
Biden has never had a coherent
economic strategy. His only economic method is to rely on his Congress to spend as much as they can
without outright destroying the
Dollar. Bidenomics shows you everything wrong with the Beltway's Madison Avenue obsession.
But it's worked so
far, depending on how you view things.
If you're in the crowd that gets the
goodies, you must be pleased as
punch. But I suspect you're not, which is why you'll hold your nose and pull the lever for The Donald
this autumn.
But this chart has been making the rounds on social media, with good reason. Courtesy of
The Wall Street
Journal:

Things make a lot
more sense now.
Biden claims household wealth has gone up nearly 20% under him, roughly the same as Trump's
through three years of their
presidency.
But there's one huge difference: Biden's growth is a mere 0.7% once
you adjust for inflation.
Trump's was 16.0%.
Old joke:
Why did God create
economists?
To make weathermen look good.
The Nobel Prize in Economics is fake, in case you
didn't know it. The Swedish
Central Bank awards it, not the Nobel Committee, which is why it's called the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in
Economic Sciences in Memory
of Alfred Nobel. So foul is the odor that emanates from this prize, that four of Nobel's relatives have
formally distanced themselves
from it.
And yet, we accord the people who win this gong a level of respect
they simply did not, can not, and
will not earn. Ever. They aren't the coming of Hari Seldon, of Foundation fame, much to Paul Krugman's
chagrin. They can't predict the
future. Heck, they're so awful at calling the shots, you may as well flip a coin and listen to
them.
And yet
they keep committing their signatures to nonsense papers because they think no one's keeping track of
their awful track
records.
For instance, my friend and colleague Alan Knuckman brought up in our
editorial meeting yesterday
that sixteen – count 'em! – sixteen Nobel Prize-winning economists wrote an open letter warning that if
Donald Trump won a second
term, his economic agenda would be "vastly" inferior to that of President Joe Biden's and that Trump
would also "reignite" the
inflation "which has come down remarkably fast."
As the British would say, "The
bloody cheek!"
Thanks to Tiana Lowe Doescher of The Washington Examiner, we know 14 of the 16 who penned
this letter also wrote a letter
in 2021 supporting Build Back Better.
Doescher writes:
"You see, 14 of the 16
economists from the 2024 letter wrote another letter in September 2021 cheering on Biden's 'Build Back
Better' agenda, which would
later become the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law [BIL].
"Spearheaded by Joseph
Stiglitz of Columbia, George
Akerlof of Georgetown, Sir Angus Deaton of Princeton, Sir Oliver Hart of Harvard, Eric Maskin of
Harvard, Daniel McFadden of Berkley,
Paul Milgrom of Stanford, Roger Myerson of the University of Chicago, Edmund Phelps of Columbia, Paul
Romer of NYU, William Sharpe of
Stanford, Robert Shiller of Yale, Christopher Sims of Princeton, and Robert Solow of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology claimed
that the BIL, which infused about half a trillion Dollars of new spending into the economy, would 'ease
longer-term inflationary
pressures' despite inflation already running at 5%."
Again, this September 2021
letter would be less
embarrassing if Stiglitz hadn't already endorsed the preliminary portion of the BBB agenda, the American
Rescue Plan.
Rewind back to February 2021, when inflation was just 1.7%, Stiglitz called a refusal to
pass the "urgently needed" $1.9
trillion ARP "irresponsible and reckless".
In short, these guys don't have any
better idea of the outcome of
policies than you do. Trust your wallet. Don't ever trust these charlatans, one of whom (Akerloff) is
married to the most incompetent
Treasury Secretary in US history.
The reason why you don't feel any wealthier
than when Trump was in is
because you aren't materially wealthier than then.
If you were worth $100,000
(for math's sake) on Day 1 of
Biden's term, you are now worth, on average, $100,700. You've increased your wealth by $700 over three
years, or $233.33. Thanks to
Joke Biden, you can go to one more baseball game than before.
Of course, if
you're lucky enough to be in the
arms business, I congratulate you.











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