Over the last year, inflation has accelerated at its quickest rate in more than 40 years, putting pressure on American consumers and wiping out salary raises for many.
According to the Labor Department, the consumer price index increased by 8.5 percent in March from a year earlier, the largest year-over-year increase since December 1981. Prices have risen due to bottlenecked supply chains, strong consumer demand, and global food and energy market disruptions exacerbated by Russia’s war in Ukraine. Inflation increased by 1.2 percent from February to March, the largest monthly increase since 2005.
Jason Furman at Harvard University, one of President Barack Obama’s top economists, wrote in a Wall Street Journal article. He said:
“Inflation ran 8.5% in the year ending last month, while nominal wages grew only 5.6%, a decline in inflation-adjusted wages of 2.7%.”
“This presents a serious challenge to the ‘hot economy’ thesis that tighter labor markets lead to rising real wages. This idea has never been as popular among academic economists as it is among Washington policy makers. A hot economy is surely better than a cold one, but the costs of an overheating economy might be larger than policy makers have appreciated.”
From CNBC:
Price increases came from many of the usual culprits. Food rose 1% for the month and 8.8% over the year. Energy prices were up 11% and 32%, respectively,” while “Shelter cost, which makes up about one-third of the CPI weighting, increased another 0.5% on the month, making the 12-month gain a blistering 5%.
The Dailywire reports:
The White House has repeatedly sought to distance the president from soaring inflation, going so far as to coin a new term, “Putin’s price hike.” For instance, on Biden’s official schedule for Tuesday, the White House said he would deliver a speech in part on administration efforts to “reduce the impact of Putin’s Price Hike.”
But for the record, here is how much inflation has risen every month since Biden took office (he was inaugurated on January 20, 2021), compiled using the Consumer Price Index data provided by the U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics:
- January 2021 — 1.4%
- February — 1.7%
- March — 2.6%
- April — 4.2%
- May — 5.0%
- June — 5.4%
- July — 5.4%
- August — 5.3%
- September — 5.4%
- October — 6.2%
- November — 6.8%
- December — 7.0%
- January 2022 — 7.5%
- February — 7.9%
- March — 8.5%
For the record, Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022.
When Biden took office, a gallon of regular gasoline was $2.33, according to AAA. The average price of a gallon of gasoline is now $4.10, up 43% from a year ago.
Consumers see the price hikes daily at the grocery store. “The cost of meat, poultry, fish and eggs is 13% higher since February 2021,” CNBC reported. “Fresh fruit has gone up 10.6% in price in that time, while the price for vegetables has remained much more stable, increasing just 4.3%. The price of pre-packaged cereals and baked goods has increased 7.7%.”
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