Weekly Opinion Editorial
SPONGES!
by Steve Fair
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is the
measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by consumers for
consumer goods and services. In June,
the CPI rose 1.3% for the month. The CPI
is up +9.1% in the last 12 months. That
is the highest growth rate since November 1981. Food prices at the shelf have
risen even more: +10.4% in the past 52 weeks.
Gas prices are up a whopping +41.6% the past year.
Inflation has hit hard at the wholesale
level as well. Prices for food
processors and producers surged to near record level from a year ago; +11.3%. Translated, that means consumers will likely see
even higher food prices at the shelf in the future. Stripping out food and gas, the annual
inflation rate vs. last year is +5.9%. Three
observations:
First, this inflation is not transitory or
temporary. In July 2021, President Biden
said the increase in prices consumers was seeing was not persistent inflation
and would be temporary. After thirteen consecutive
months of price increases, clearly the President was wrong last year. Inflation is here for at least another
year. Even
liberal CNN has said the president shouldn’t have called the inflation
transitory.
Second, Biden’s failed policies have fueled
inflation. The POTUS continues to pass
the buck on the economy, but the $1.9 trillion stimulus bill passed last year
heavily contributed to the current inflationary mess. America’s policy of ‘spending’ its way out of
economic downturns finally caught up with the good ole USA. Couple
that with Biden’s ‘war on fossil fuels,’ policies and you have gasoline at
record prices. The first way to solve a
problem is to admit one exists. The
Biden administration has failed to acknowledge inflation even exists, so it
unlikely they have a plan to get it under control.
Third, sponges do not exist in an economic
system. Increases must be passed through. Consumers can’t ‘absorb’ price increases
without increases in wages. A retailer or
a producer cannot ‘absorb’ an increase.
They must pass them through. If increases
are bottlenecked anywhere along the supply chain, disfunction occurs. The answer
to high prices is high prices. When prices
reach a level where demand comes down, prices will fall. It is basic economics.
Inflation has brought with it two big
problems: Wages haven’t kept up with price increases and rising interest rates have
decreased investment activity. President
Biden has blamed inflation on Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, but the truth is the
US has a significantly worse core (excludes food and gasoline) inflation rate
than the rest of the world. Most economists believe it is because the US spent
so much on stimulus. The best thing the
government can do to help stop inflation is to stop spending money. In the 1970s, OPEC’s policies on oil exports created
double digit inflation in the U.S. In
2022, the cause of high prices is not external, it’s internal. President Biden’s failed economic policy that
doesn’t put America first has lowered the average U.S. consumer buying power by
22% in the past 18 months.
Instead of pandering to Saudi Arabia to sell
the US more oil, perhaps President Biden should meet with domestic energy
leaders and ask them what their government could do to help them. But government is where you find the sponges. They absorb everything and don’t pass
anything on.
No comments:
Post a Comment