Dubai Telegraph - Biden takes aim at inflation but short on weapons

EUR -
AED 3.877513
AFN 71.777901
ALL 98.321917
AMD 418.020726
ANG 1.902405
AOA 961.712252
ARS 1065.751826
AUD 1.623594
AWG 1.900237
AZN 1.806954
BAM 1.956787
BBD 2.131165
BDT 126.133615
BGN 1.956397
BHD 0.397976
BIF 3118.446626
BMD 1.055687
BND 1.418742
BOB 7.293644
BRL 6.31354
BSD 1.055527
BTN 89.130375
BWP 14.419614
BYN 3.453824
BYR 20691.473668
BZD 2.127583
CAD 1.478593
CDF 3029.822829
CHF 0.932063
CLF 0.037415
CLP 1032.399118
CNY 7.64793
CNH 7.65175
COP 4645.16194
CRC 539.069324
CUC 1.055687
CUP 27.975717
CVE 110.321163
CZK 25.28013
DJF 187.96569
DKK 7.457529
DOP 63.733653
DZD 140.964863
EGP 52.351644
ERN 15.835311
ETB 130.763131
FJD 2.393929
FKP 0.833272
GBP 0.831951
GEL 2.887343
GGP 0.833272
GHS 16.308148
GIP 0.833272
GMD 74.953919
GNF 9096.630936
GTQ 8.1443
GYD 220.762386
HKD 8.217597
HNL 26.705469
HRK 7.530492
HTG 138.38307
HUF 413.048071
IDR 16754.076253
ILS 3.858057
IMP 0.833272
INR 89.169165
IQD 1382.73012
IRR 44418.048641
ISK 144.903824
JEP 0.833272
JMD 166.304663
JOD 0.748797
JPY 159.908672
KES 136.920874
KGS 91.633456
KHR 4254.246359
KMF 492.480666
KPW 950.118289
KRW 1473.417847
KWD 0.324655
KYD 0.879664
KZT 540.550064
LAK 23165.793301
LBP 94521.323802
LKR 306.833297
LRD 189.470045
LSL 19.180683
LTL 3.11717
LVL 0.638574
LYD 5.149622
MAD 10.562927
MDL 19.327205
MGA 4928.509018
MKD 61.546802
MMK 3428.831599
MNT 3587.225837
MOP 8.461268
MRU 42.105435
MUR 49.087799
MVR 16.310026
MWK 1830.33179
MXN 21.532973
MYR 4.694645
MZN 67.481283
NAD 19.181228
NGN 1780.047794
NIO 38.839405
NOK 11.661656
NPR 142.6086
NZD 1.7917
OMR 0.406438
PAB 1.055537
PEN 3.960898
PGK 4.256147
PHP 61.958824
PKR 293.433102
PLN 4.307951
PYG 8232.151855
QAR 3.847459
RON 4.977674
RSD 116.960689
RUB 114.015383
RWF 1469.275818
SAR 3.966017
SBD 8.857841
SCR 14.413764
SDG 634.998003
SEK 11.530788
SGD 1.417023
SHP 0.833272
SLE 23.966605
SLL 22137.242606
SOS 603.218516
SRD 37.376632
STD 21850.598419
SVC 9.235702
SYP 2652.446194
SZL 19.189132
THB 36.353673
TJS 11.505257
TMT 3.705463
TND 3.334382
TOP 2.472524
TRY 36.531647
TTD 7.172651
TWD 34.384271
TZS 2792.938341
UAH 43.897547
UGX 3894.964411
USD 1.055687
UYU 45.213017
UZS 13578.912787
VES 49.403634
VND 26785.957213
VUV 125.333333
WST 2.947047
XAF 656.300436
XAG 0.03488
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.853048
XDR 0.807426
XOF 656.291106
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.842657
ZAR 19.108602
ZMK 9502.454734
ZMW 28.472225
ZWL 339.930922
  • NGG

    0.5000

    63.33

    +0.79%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    146.4

    -1.37%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    47.05

    +0.51%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    13.47

    -0.52%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    24.52

    -0.2%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    62.32

    +0.47%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    6.91

    +1.59%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.41

    +1.27%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    34.33

    +0.9%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    27.02

    +1.44%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    8.97

    +1.23%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.36

    -0.29%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    67.2

    +1.25%

Biden takes aim at inflation but short on weapons
Biden takes aim at inflation but short on weapons / Photo: SAUL LOEB - AFP

Biden takes aim at inflation but short on weapons

US President Joe Biden has launched a battle against soaring prices as he tries to claw back waning public support ahead of key congressional elections, but is finding he has few tools to defuse sky-high inflation.

Text size:

Consumer prices have surged at the fastest pace in more than 40 years, overshadowing an otherwise strong US economy. Supply chain snarls brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic were exacerbated by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, sending prices up as demand rapidly outstripped the supply of available goods, while a worker shortage pushes up wages.

Biden has been left scrambling for solutions as he tries to ease the pain faced by American families ahead of November midterm elections in which his Democrats are forecast to lose control of Congress to opposition Republicans.

But "there's not much the administration can do directly to fight inflation," Gregory Daco, chief economist at Ernst & Young Parthenon, told AFP.

Writing in the Wall Street Journal on Monday, Biden outlined his long-term plan to ease price pressures and help the world's largest economy transition to "stable, steady growth," by boosting economic productivity and reducing the federal budget deficit.

But the Federal Reserve, not the White House, has the primary role in tackling inflation, and has started aggressively raising interest rates to cool the economy.

Biden pledged to give the central bank the space to do its work free of political interference -- unlike some of his predecessors, including Donald Trump who engaged in a relentless campaign against the Fed.

"It starts with a simple proposition: respect the Fed, respect the Fed's independence," he said Tuesday, following a rare meeting with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.

- 'Limited and slow impact' -

While employment is back near pre-pandemic levels and growth is strong, savage price increases for essentials including food and fuel have sparked growing public dissatisfaction.

Biden has pivoted to more aggressively trying to explain inflation as a byproduct of forces beyond his control, including blaming Russian leader Vladimir Putin for the invasion of Ukraine that has pushed energy and food prices higher.

Biden calls the effect "Putin's price hike."

But the US leader's approval ratings are barely in the 40 percent range as people pay more at the gas pump and in the grocery store.

Gas prices on Wednesday jumped to a national average of $4.67 a gallon, from $4.19 a month ago and just $3.04 in June 2021, according to AAA.

The administration has released oil from the strategic petroleum reserve to try and bring down gas prices, but with little effect.

Other steps include clean energy tax credits and federal investments in production, as well as expanding Medicare to lower medical costs.

On Monday, Biden unveiled the Housing Supply Action Plan, which aims to improve housing supply and affordability.

But many of the contemplated steps "either require Congress to pass legislation (good luck with that) or they're policies that won't do a lot to bring down inflation in the near term," said Stephanie Kelton, an economics professor at Stony Brook University, in a blog post.

Biden on Wednesday acknowledged that his power to have an immediate impact is limited.

"The idea that we’re going to be able to click a switch" to lower prices is "unrealistic," he said.

"We can't take immediate action" on gas prices, he said, but instead can try to "compensate" to lower costs of other goods.

- 'I was wrong' -

As the US economy roared back to life following the pandemic downturn, policymakers cheered but they were caught off-guard by the inflation surge.

Powell and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen last year repeatedly assured Americans that rising prices would be "transitory," but have since admitted they misjudged.

"I think I was wrong then about the path that inflation would take," Yellen told CNN. "There have been unanticipated and large shocks that have boosted energy and food prices, and supply bottlenecks that have affected our economy badly."

The Fed has begun acting aggressively to try to cool the US economy, raising the benchmark lending rate three quarters of a percentage point since March and signaling more big increases are coming in the effort to tamp down prices, hopefully without tipping the economy into recession.

Moving earlier would have helped slow the economy faster, Daco said, though at the cost of rapid growth.

But Kathy Bostjancic, a chief US economist at Oxford Economics, said the chances of a recession are low.

"We view a soft landing as the more likely outcome in 2023," she said.

The US economy still has potential for an increase in both labor and goods, as workers return to the labor force and supply chains are restored, she said.

US consumers also are shifting spending more to services like travel an entertainment, which will take the pressure off goods.

"An increase in the supply side of the economy would go a long way to quell inflationary pressures," Bostjancic said.

That would allow the Fed to slow rate hikes, which "could sharply improve the chances of achieving a soft-landing for the economy."

I.Mansoor--DT