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Date: 2025-03-14 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00027012
US ECONOMY
IMPACT ON ELECTION

CNN Opinion: The economy is strong, but it might not be enough for Biden


A shopper carries bags at the Polaris Fashion Place mall on Black Friday in Columbus,
Ohio, US, on Friday, Nov. 24, 2023. Matthew Hatcher/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Original article: https://www.cnn.com/2024/06/12/opinions/biden-economy-presidential-election-brown/index.html
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY
I used to think of myself as quite 'conservative', but the thinking of conservatives at this point in time and in the United States bears no resemlance to my own conservative thinking.

My understanding of the US economy is that in aggregate the economy is very strong, and arguably the best in the world.

Rather few people in the general population are getting a fair share of the benefit of this aggregate economic strength. This is because the distribtion of the US economic product is more inequitable than at any point in my lifetime ... I am 84 years old ... and any time since the 1920s. The distribution of income and wealth in the USA has been gerring more and more unequal for the past 40+ years ... an economic fact that most people probably know ... but a lot of other issues relating to income and wealth distribution are less obvious and well known.

The stock markets in the USA have been at record highs in recent years. This is because corporate profits have been at record high levels over this time period.

Corporate profits have been high in large part because companies have become very productive which is always reported in the media as being a good thing! Certainly for 'investors' it is a good thing, but for workers it can be a disaster. For many US workers and their families this disaster has been ongoing for upwards of four decades ... and not addressed very well by political leaders many of whom are beholden to all sorts of wealthy special interests.

Over several decades essential national 'investment' has been reduced as taxation has been reduced. Onr result is a national infrastructure that needs massive maintenance, modernisation and expansion. President Biden has made a start, but there is a multi-decade backlog of work that needs to be done.

MORE COMMENTARY ON THIS ARTICLE TO COME ........


Peter Burgess
Opinion: The economy is strong, but it might not be enough for Biden ... The combination of this month’s inflation numbers and strong jobs report will test the conventional wisdom about the link between economic growth and performance in presidential elections.

Opinion by Patrick T. Brown
Editor’s Note: Patrick T. Brown is a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a conservative think tank and advocacy group based in Washington, DC. He is also a former senior policy adviser to Congress’ Joint Economic Committee. The views expressed in this piece are his own.

Published Wed June 12, 2024, 12:45 PM EDT,

Since 1992, political consultants have loved to quote some version of strategist James Carville’s quip that the most important factor determining the next occupant of the White House is “the economy, stupid.”

This month’s rosy economic data is nearly everything the president could ask for. But the questions remains: Will a strong economy be enough to drag President Joe Biden over the finish line? Or will voters’ concerns about his age and performance outweigh the question first asked by Ronald Reagan in 1980: “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?”

Inflation slowed in May, with prices rising 3.3% from a year earlier and flat on a month-by-month basis, according to Consumer Price Index data released Wednesday. The number has major political ramifications: It’s the final that will be reported before the first presidential debate between Biden and former President Donald Trump.

This month’s inflation reading is further evidence that while there is more room to go before the Federal Reserve can hang up “Mission Accomplished” banners in its effort to bring inflation down to its 2% target, it can give itself at least a small pat on the back. After all, it wasn’t all that long ago — June 2022, to be precise — that the headline inflation number was 9.1% year-over-year, the highest it had been since 1981. But ever since, inflation has subsided through a combination of higher interest rates, as well as less fuel thrown on the fire via prolific Covid-era stimulus spending. Since mid-2023, inflation has bounced around 3% and change — still above the Fed’s target, but a far cry from the early Biden years.

US President Joe Biden speaks about gun safety at Everytown's Gun Sense University at the Washington Hilton in Washington, DC, on June 11, 2024. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

This, on top of a hot job market, positive wage trends and record employment for Black and Hispanic workers reveal a strong economy for most households. A research note from the Federal Reserve found that the US economy is uniquely strong on the world stage, having returned to its pre-pandemic trend in growth, reduced unemployment and increased productivity compared to almost all of its global competitors.

With all of this good news on the economic front, some may wonder, why do so many polls show a too-close-to-call divide between the current and former president?

The first is that voters have a longer memory than Democrats might wish. No matter how the Biden administration might try to pitch it as the price paid for our gangbusters post-Covid recovery, high inflation leaves a bad aftertaste, like a generic-brand diet cola.

High inflation went from something found in the history books to an everyday experience, as the price tags at the grocery store were swapped out for higher amounts on seemingly every trip.

All told, prices are up 19% since Biden was sworn in, while average weekly wages have only increased 15% (though that latter number is complicated by the shifting composition of the post-Covid labor force). And the aftermath persists — high interest rates continue to make big-ticket items, like houses and cars, feel out of reach for many would-be buyers.

The second, more prosaic reason may be that while voters vote on their pocketbook, there are other dimensions to a vote for president than just whether they are economically better off than they were four years ago.

The litany of foreign policy crises where the White House has seemed caught on the wrong foot — the shambolic withdrawal from Afghanistan, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Hamas terrorist attacks in Israel, a saber-rattling China — may leave some voters longing for the tough rhetoric and realist — some would say cynical — deal-making of Trump’s term in office.

All of this, on top of the fact that Biden would be the oldest man ever elected president were he to win re-election, and the at-times overhyped but undeniable sense that he has slowed down since his days as vice president, suggests the Biden campaign can’t solely point to the signs of a strong economy to do their work for them.

Trump’s behavior after the 2020 election and the lingering aftereffects of the Dobbs decision may be the White House’s two strongest campaign weapons to turn out left-leaning voters. But for the politically unengaged, “the economy, stupid” may be the decisive factor. It’s clear voters will not forget the high inflation environment of 2021 and 2022. But whether they are willing to forgive it may end up determining who wins the White House in November.

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