The new poll results showed that inflation continues to cloud the Biden campaign’s efforts to convince voters of “Bidenomics”, the president’s strategy to rejuvenate the country’s industrial sector and reverse years of middle-class wage stagnation.
Yeah, that’s Biden’s fault.
The president doesn’t really have any appreciable effect on the economy. Every economist knows this. Industrial policy like Bidenomics, which includes the Inflation Reduction Act, among other things, takes years to have any impact, has so many moving parts that the implementation is out of his hands, and it will necessarily be both good and bad depending on your point of view. Less fossil fuel production looks bad even as renewable energy declines in prices to be more economical, for example.
For the president to have encouraged people to look at the economy as his success was a failure from the beginning in principle. Now, it’s even more of a failure in practice. But it would have been equally foolish to praise him for the state of the economy. It’s not the president’s to control.
Spending Biden called for and. approved has increased inflation.
Inflation takes a while to hit, so much of what we are experiencing is from Trump’s administration. And in addition to that, the president doesn’t set the budget, congress does. Republicans are just as responsible for calls for spending and approval of inflation increasing policy.
And that’s all before acknowledging that it’s corporate greed disguised as inflation for the most part. Corporate earnings are at record breaking highs. That’s not a coincidence.
Biden stopped exploration of new drill sites, that will decrease supply, which it did, less supply increases cost to the consumer.
Specifically, fossil fuel costs. Renewable energy costs continue to decline and are cheaper than fossil fuels.
Also, higher consumer costs aren’t necessarily a bad thing. A higher fossil fuel costs force consumers to be more judicious about their choices that involve fossil fuels. How is that a bad thing? A price-sensitive consumer will reduce their use of fossil fuels, and have more money to spend on other areas of their life. In contrast, gas guzzling pavement princesses will eat into their owner’s pockets more than ever before.
Between the two, I’d prefer to be the former so I can eat more steaks and potatoes.
Fuel prices rising 30% after Biden shut down leases then fell 25% when he opened them back up. Sure seems like he has an effect.
Correlation does not imply causation. You’re applying 100% of the cause to Biden due to correlation when in reality Biden is only a small part.
The Biden was the one who approved the budget, he threatened to veto if spending items were cut. He could have vetoed unless spending was cut. He didn’t and now we have inflation.
Again, it takes a long time for government policy to influence inflation, and so what we are currently experiencing is largely from Trump’s administration. And again, a big chunk of the “inflation” isn’t actually inflation but instead corporate greed. And third, sometimes spending is necessary to avoid a bigger disaster.
Yeah, that’s Biden’s fault.
The president doesn’t really have any appreciable effect on the economy. Every economist knows this. Industrial policy like Bidenomics, which includes the Inflation Reduction Act, among other things, takes years to have any impact, has so many moving parts that the implementation is out of his hands, and it will necessarily be both good and bad depending on your point of view. Less fossil fuel production looks bad even as renewable energy declines in prices to be more economical, for example.
For the president to have encouraged people to look at the economy as his success was a failure from the beginning in principle. Now, it’s even more of a failure in practice. But it would have been equally foolish to praise him for the state of the economy. It’s not the president’s to control.
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No he doesn’t. At best the president has an indirect and minimal effect on fuel prices.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnBqAzJXVGo
We should have stopped in the 70s, but here we are.
But regardless, he didn’t stop the current wells from extracting, he increased the cost of new ones.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/20/climate/biden-drilling-federal-lands.html
https://usafacts.org/articles/how-much-oil-and-gas-comes-from-federal-territory/
Believe me I wish he actually put a stop to it.
Inflation takes a while to hit, so much of what we are experiencing is from Trump’s administration. And in addition to that, the president doesn’t set the budget, congress does. Republicans are just as responsible for calls for spending and approval of inflation increasing policy.
And that’s all before acknowledging that it’s corporate greed disguised as inflation for the most part. Corporate earnings are at record breaking highs. That’s not a coincidence.
deleted by creator
Specifically, fossil fuel costs. Renewable energy costs continue to decline and are cheaper than fossil fuels.
Also, higher consumer costs aren’t necessarily a bad thing. A higher fossil fuel costs force consumers to be more judicious about their choices that involve fossil fuels. How is that a bad thing? A price-sensitive consumer will reduce their use of fossil fuels, and have more money to spend on other areas of their life. In contrast, gas guzzling pavement princesses will eat into their owner’s pockets more than ever before.
Between the two, I’d prefer to be the former so I can eat more steaks and potatoes.
deleted by creator
Tell me you don’t know what the OPEC cartel is without telling me…
deleted by creator
https://ycharts.com/indicators/opec_crude_oil_production
They’re changing them all the fucking time to keep oil as high of a price as possible.
Which is why I said “indirect and minimal”. The other causes are much stronger.
deleted by creator
Cool. Doesn’t change the fact that the president has a minimal effect.
I am aware.
deleted by creator
Correlation does not imply causation. You’re applying 100% of the cause to Biden due to correlation when in reality Biden is only a small part.
Again, it takes a long time for government policy to influence inflation, and so what we are currently experiencing is largely from Trump’s administration. And again, a big chunk of the “inflation” isn’t actually inflation but instead corporate greed. And third, sometimes spending is necessary to avoid a bigger disaster.