Excuse Me While I Take Care of the Trash

I have heard or read a constant parade of how bad the economy was during Biden’s term in office. Yep, we did have inflation. It would have been great if we did not experience such. It was not in the cards this go around. Many other countries experienced similar. Politicians love to play the inflation card over and over again.

As the nation came to a halt, Biden could have left citizens tough it out on state provided unemployment. and maybe a time-limited boost from the Feds. He didn’t and he made sure there was funding available to supplement people budgets while being out of work, their healthcare by revising the ACA, small companies that were shutting down with loans which were forgiven, and local governments regardless of politics. Still building those semiconductor plants in Arizona too.

If you do not want to believe the supply chain was being manipulated due to this, then look at it as the inability of companies to plan it with contingencies for emergencies muchless a pandemic. Many companies do not care much for planning inventory and the supply chain delivering it to their business and customers. They salivate when business is good, increased sales, and profits increase during good, not-so-good-times, Wall Street blowing themselves up gambling, and pandemics.

Not many, if any Schooner Tunas out there these days. Inflation could have been less in the US but for reasons other than Biden’s policies.

As usual and with good timing Paul Krugman has something to say along similar or close to my topic lines. Maybe a smidgen different than my comment.

I’ve tried to maintain a light tone in this newsletter, with plenty of snark. But sometimes I do get angry. Apologies.

If a presidential candidate were to declare that the earth is flat, you would be sure to see a news analysis under the headline ”Shape of the Planet: Both Sides Have a Point.”

Since then, Republican lies. And yes, the major ones have consistently come from the G.O.P. They have gotten ever bigger, but the insistence on bothsidesing when there aren’t two sides remains, with an increasing Republican tilt.

Biden, however, was the most pro-worker president we’ve had in generations, only to find his political prospects dimmed by inflation. So, whose fault was that?

Well, if you ask me, readers deserve more than this:

Democrats said the president was the political victim of a global trend emerging from the pandemic. Republicans pointed to his policies, and one piece of legislation in particular, the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, saying it poured gasoline on the smoldering embers of post-pandemic inflation.

OK, Democrats say one thing, Republicans say another. Views differ on shape of planet. But what are the facts? Shouldn’t readers at least be told that cumulative inflation since the start of the pandemic has been pretty much the same in all advanced countries, which sure seems to support the Democratic narrative that Biden’s policies weren’t responsible?

Now, you can still find ways to blame the A.R.P. for some U.S. inflation; the best one, I think, is to claim that Europe was more vulnerable to the Putin shock than we were, so we should have had less inflation, and the fact that we didn’t can be attributed to excess stimulus. But that’s a fairly convoluted argument and probably doesn’t work numerically. At any rate, readers should know that the raw fact is that America didn’t have higher inflation than other advanced economies — yet Weisman not only doesn’t tell readers that, he slants the narrative by giving the last word to a Republican asserting that it was all Biden’s fault.

More fundamentally, election results shouldn’t change your economic analysis — especially after an election decided by low-information voters who believed Trump’s promise, which he instantly abandoned after the vote, that he would bring down grocery prices. If you believed that Biden’s economic policy was bad, you should have continued to believe that even if Harris had won. If you believed his policy was good, Trump’s win shouldn’t change that conclusion.

Don’t let the political victors rewrite history, economic or otherwise.