Blame Insane Government Spending for Inflation
Some want to solve the problem with subsidies for gas, housing, child care, and more. That only risks greater stagnation.

Many people still blame today's inflation on snags in globe-spanning supply chains. The chief proposed solution is to dismantle decades of globalization and bring production home. Some are also pushing for measures to offset inflation, including robust child subsidies and tax rebates for gas and food.
These proposals are rooted in a misunderstanding of the true cause of inflation: namely, government-induced demand. More spending, therefore, will only fuel the inflation fires.
Over the course of the pandemic, the Treasury Department issued roughly $6 trillion, $2.7 trillion of which was monetized by the Federal Reserve. Americans were sent $5.1 trillion through various programs, including individual checks and unemployment bonuses. Overall federal debt has since risen by about $6 trillion.
This response assumes the 2020 recession was sparked by a demand shock leading to a fall in aggregate demand, rather than the strangling of aggregate supply caused by the pandemic and lockdowns. Under these circumstances, sending people and companies money was never likely to impact output. Instead, it greatly inflated demand for the durable goods still being produced.
Even by the Keynesian economic standards that prompt this sort of fiscal response, COVID-19 relief was larger than any "output gap"—the difference between what the economy is producing and the most it could produce. In March 2020, the gap was $2.3 trillion, and that year alone, the government spent $3 trillion through several relief bills.
In March 2021, Democrats passed the over-the-top $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan. At the time, the projected output gap was $700 billion through 2023—the period when most of the spending would take place. As such, the bill was two or three times too big, especially considering the economy was mostly reopened and growing, with unemployment dropping fast from 14.8 percent the year before to 6 percent.
A few center-left economists, as well as Sen. Joe Manchin (D–W.Va.), sounded the alarm that an oversized new injection of spending would overheat a growing economy and cause inflation. They were ignored, if not mocked. As a result, almost everyone from the Fed chairman to monetary experts spent most of 2021 explaining away inflation without mention of the roles played by fiscal and monetary policies.
Today, several new studies confirm that this bout of inflation is rooted in demand, not supply. That's not to say supply-chain chokepoints, originally resulting from the global shutdown imposed by governments and a sudden shift away from services toward goods, played no role.
However, we wouldn't have such large-scale supply-chain problems without the shutdowns followed by the aforementioned government-fueled increase in demand for durable goods. According to Robert Koopman at the World Trade Organization, artificially inflated demand accounted for as much as two-thirds of supply shortages.
Second, global supply chains are, obviously, global. If inflation were truly the product of supply-chain issues, we would witness roughly the same rates of inflation throughout the industrialized world. But we don't. Most industrialized countries have lower levels of inflation than the United States. These other countries also implemented significantly lower amounts of COVID-19 spending.
For instance, France, South Korea, and Norway all have inflation rates below 4 percent. Their governments spent less than 10 percent of GDP on fiscal stimulus in response to the pandemic, compared to about 26 percent in the United States.
One also needs to distinguish supply constraints, which increase the price of some goods relative to other goods, and inflation, which occurs when the prices of everything, including labor, rise. Supply shocks and constraints do not cause the same broad-based pattern of price hikes that true inflation causes. In addition, price-level hikes caused by supply-side shocks are generally not ongoing month after month; they are one-time jumps that gradually dissipate when the supply shock is over.
Today, all prices are rising, including wages (though for now at a lower rate), and the inflation is persistent. This is because of overblown fiscal and monetary policies. Tackling the problem requires strong Fed actions and significant fiscal restraint by Congress. Short of both, inflation will persist for much longer, inflicting disproportionate harm on the most economically vulnerable.
This also means that the recent calls to offset inflation with subsidies for gas, housing, child care, and more will require borrowed money. Since fiscal largesse is the source of the problem, and since these efforts make the affected markets more inefficient, the approach raises the risk of a great stagnation spiral.
COPYRIGHT 2022 CREATORS.COM.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Bullshit you idiot. Inflation is global and is largely due to Covid and pent up demand. Yes, government policy can exacerbate it, but at root that is not the cause. By the way, the alternative to the various rescue plans - supported by both parties - was people in the streets and an economic collapse.
The writer owns a hammer and every problem is a nail. Dude, get a screw gun. It's the present and future of building.
So sayeth the Statist Shill and State Worshippers everywhere.
Covid literally came from a government lab, you lying fuck.
We heard that theory. Thanks for playing.
Wait, you still think it was a natural occurrence?
Remind me again how much money Uncle Sam just straight up printed under the banner of "Coronavirus relief"? I forget if it was 4 or 6 trillion.
How come no one here counts the money printed during the last Administration?
The “King of Debt” promised to reduce the national debt — then his tax cuts made it surge. Add in the pandemic, and he oversaw the third-biggest deficit increase of any president.
The national debt rose by almost $7.8 trillion during Trump’s time in office.
The growth in the annual deficit under Trump ranks as the third-biggest increase, relative to the size of the economy, of any U.S. presidential administration. Unlike George W. Bush and Abraham Lincoln, who oversaw the larger relative increases in deficits, Trump did not launch two foreign conflicts or have to pay for a civil war.
Read the replies below. Biden is responsible for the inflation. The economy grew well under Trump before COVID.
Don't lie again and repent.
So desperate to be ruled. Get up off of your damn knees.
He won’t. It makes the blowbangs easier.
By the way, the alternative to the various rescue plans - supported by both parties - was people in the streets and an economic collapse.
Or not locking the planet down in the first place, dumb fuck.
Slow Thursday really loves his false dichotomies.
"Inflation is global"
That explains why all of the countries are experiencing a similar inflation rate, even with vastly different currencies and economic policies.
. . .
I wouldn't be too quick to call anyone an idiot.
@Minadin:
"That explains why all of the countries are experiencing a similar inflation rate, even with vastly different currencies and economic policies."
But that's not true:
"France, South Korea, and Norway all have inflation rates below 4 percent. Their governments spent less than 10 percent of GDP on fiscal stimulus in response to the pandemic, compared to about 26 percent in the United States."
Is it fucking "Backwards Day" where you live? Are you too stupid to understand simple information presented in straightforward plain language? Or are you just so used to lying you can no longer notice when it's embarrassingly obvious?
I think Minadin was trying to make exactly that point (in rebuttal to JoeFriday) but with more sarcasm and less data.
The sarcasm doesn't always translate.
Calm down keyboard warrior.
He is still right about Biden being responsible for the inflation though. You have no rebuttal.
The writer owns a hammer and every problem is a nail.
PhD in economics from Sorbonne. That hammer?
It is global because all left leaning governments treated covid the same way with lockdowns. Countries such as Sweden with less restrictions fid better overall. States that had less restrictions in the US recovered faster.
And yes global governments injecting money into the global markets caused global inflation.
so, spending numbers and production gaps are just anecdotal?
No, the USA's level of inflation is not global. #Bidenflation dwarfs the inflation rate in other countries, and it's easily traced to the beginning of the #BidenPrices Admin:
https://twitter.com/AndyPuzder/status/1509119664454094850/photo/1
Government spending + government-caused supply-chain disruptions = inflation.
You’re an ignorant fool. You should never ever speak.
Nice try. You maintained a "truth in posting" standard for...one word.
Better than usual.
It's fun watching MMT leftists attempting to ignore the reality that hyper-government spending has consequences.
Something must be produced before it can be consumed. But governments everywhere consume first and then hope/wish/pray someone somewhere produces more stuff.
"more stuff for *FREE*; like a slave...."
Well Said... +100000
Let us not fool ourselves, slavery is the end game.
Sanctimonious drivel.
You're going to have to lay out the steps between your claim that covid caused inflation an awful lot more clearly. What you've presented so far doesn't fly.
You seem to be saying covid -> lockdowns -> pent-up demand -> increased prices. While it is generally true that increasing demand leads to increasing prices (all else held constant), that logic would imply that during the period of the lockdowns (when demand was artificially suppressed), the prices should have decreased (which didn't happen) and now that demand is returning to normal, prices should be returning to where they were before covid (they aren't).
The contrary argument is the government policy is in fact the root cause of inflation. If that hypothesis is true, we should expect to see countries hit with covid who reacted with "free money" to have increased inflation but countries hit with covid who reacted differently to not have increased inflation. In fact, the country-level* data shows precisely that. Economies that pumped out "relief money" are seeing inflation. Economies that reacted differently largely aren't.
The alternative, by the way, was not "people in the streets and an economic collapse" - which, again, we know because that didn't happen even in places that didn't hand out lots and lots of free money.
* I footnote "countries" because it really depends on the currency zone. The EU has many countries but for the purposes of this analysis must be treated as one.
Darned comment squirrels. That was supposed to be a reply to Joe Friday at 4:33 above.
Rossami - see below.
Production lagged during the pandemic, not just demand, and producers are still not fully recovered. I am a builder and experiencing these continued shortages.
If that were true, then we should expect to see industry-specific price increases correlated to the degree of decrease in supply. Further, we should expect to see those industry-specific prices decrease as supply is restored (which, I will freely admit) will occur in different industries at different rates. Construction would be among those I would expect to be slowest.
However, again that's mostly not what we see. Inflation is across-the-board even for industries which did not suffer much or which recovered quickly compared to others. And there are no indications of a return to pre-covid price levels.
By the way, the detail data underlying that WorldBank report actually supports my hypothesis. Yes, lots of countries are seeing inflation at the same time. That's because "throw money at it" was not a mistake unique to the US. When you look at the detailed data rather than just the averages, the countries bucking the trend (the 19 of 34 AEs and 31 of 109 EMDEs) tell a very interesting story.
Supply does not depend solely on production. If no one is working the ports or driving the trucks, the price of EVERYTHING goes up. Then wages go up, which drives the price of everything else up. There ARE industry-specific spikes in raw materials, including fossil fuels, which are usually excluded from core inflation precisely because their effects are felt throughout the economy.
There simply is no way of knowing the extent to which printing money and supply shocks account for this round of inflation. People who are sure are wrong to be sure, whether or not they are right on the merits.
There actually is. We are still not at pre-COVID prices despite the recovery. See TruthDetector's link above.
"Inflation has come back faster, spiked more markedly, and proved to be more stubborn and persistent than major central banks initially thought possible. After initially dominating headlines in the United States, the problem has become a centerpiece of policy discussions in many other advanced economies. In 15 of the 34 countries classified as AEs by the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook, 12-month inflation through December 2021 was running above 5%. Such a sudden, shared jump in high inflation (by modern standards) has not been seen in more than 20 years.
Nor is this inflationary surge limited to wealthy countries. Emerging markets and developing economies have been hit by a similar wave, with 78 out of 109 EMDEs also confronting annual inflation rates above 5%. That share of EMDEs (71%) is about twice as large as it was at the end of 2020. Inflation thus has become a global problem – or nearly so, with Asia so far immune..."
https://blogs.worldbank.org/voices/return-global-inflation
It's humorous you pay no mind to the consistent historical record of powerless 'fiat' currencies in many other Nazi/Commie-Regime's....
Why it's almost like propaganda in the making.......
"CPI inflation has increased in virtually every Fitch 20 country in the past three months and is now elevated relative to pre-pandemic rates and inflation targets in many of the major economies.
With producer price inflation rates continuing to rise there are few signs yet in the data of inflation peaking and starting to decline. High and rising inflation has been an enduring feature of economic recoveries in many major economies, shifting the outlook for monetary policy and contributing to recent increases in bond yields. Meanwhile labour market recoveries continue to strengthen..."
https://www.fitchratings.com/research/sovereigns/rise-in-global-inflation-widespread-persistent-28-02-2022
I love how hard you are trying to deflect blame from the current administration.
You are hitting the "thou doth protest too much" level though. Just an FYI for you.
can I blame hundreds of individual elected people instead of an ambiguous phantasm?
I don't know. You should check with noted economist Slow Thursday before making any decisions.
And a long as I'm here, the ultimate job quitting/divorce/funeral song loop.
Sometimes the best songs are ones that we can all genuinely relate to.
dude! wish I had that in 1995 lol
Specifically, blame any elected official for whom you get to vote come the next election.
Anyone supporting freebies to counteract the problem they caused in the first place sure needs to be replaced.
And, though my vote for president or senator doesn't count in this goddamned state, but don't think I haven't noticed which school board members, city council members, or state legislators were pro lockdown (pro mandate, anti-business, etc) the last two years. We already ran one city councilperson out of town for trying to punish businesses who stayed open despite Newsome's order.
>> any elected official for whom you get to vote
I hate those fucking guys most of all
All of them need to go. Re-elect nobody.
One fellow on here has said he would vote for Giant Meteor for 2024.
I'm goin with Unicron.
Are there any other nominees?
Let's get the vote out.
Reason's leading economics expert says the i-word is anti-Biden disinformation spread by wingnut.com. In fact, the Biden economy is doing so well by the most important metrics — rig count and the Warren Buffett Net Worth Index — that the only way to criticize it is to just make stuff up.
#DefendBidenAtAllCosts
Most industrialized countries have lower levels of inflation than the United States.
Obviously, they consume less spittin' tobaccy than the USA does.
Joe Friday, money follows the law of supply and demand. More money chasing the same goods and services means the goods and services cost more. My kid is 12 and even she gets it. It's not hard.
No matter how hard it tries, the government cannot and never will solve every problem for every person. It is insanity.
Printing money and spending that printed money will never solve inflation. It is insanity.
Taxing people to poverty might, but it will destroy lives, the economy and eventually the nation. It is insanity.
Our government is insane.
Or just peg the blame directly where it belongs...
The 1913 Federal Reserve Act; Pitched and Passed by Democrats.
.... leading to the Great Depression .........
Which opens the door for MORE Democratic National Socialism where FDR thwarts the Constitution wildly by threatening to stuff the courts.
...and the episodes continue on with the Great Recession and now the Great Inflation and soon to be the exact same The Venezuelan-Nazi Crash..
Because Greedy Democrats don't care today about the historical cause and effect that happens from their National Socialism (syn; Nazism).. Their Greed to FORCE others by those Gov-Guns into a state slavery over-rides their sense of fairness, justice and liberty. That's why they pay no mind to the Constitution..
Democrats are just like armed robbers who pay no mind to anyone else but themselves and the 'comfort' they can steal from others.
^
Governments are full of dishonest, conniving, duplicitous crooks, kooks, charlatans and dufuses. And dishonest punks like J Friday are out there running interference for them.
Everybody's a fucking expert.
See Joe Friday every comment.
Inflation has 1 cause and 1 cause only: government expansion of the money supply. M2 is up>40% since spring 2020 and in that same spring the Federal Reserve lowered required reserves from 10% to 0%.
That's a hell of a lot of new money in 2 years' time...
I may not be an economist, but I understand the basics.
I know that if the government sets up a table outside McDonalds and hands out vouchers for "One Combo Meal, Limited to $10", the price of every single combo meal in McDonalds will quickly be set to $10, and perhaps higher. And why not? If someone was willing to pay $7 for a combo meal before the vouchers, paying $15 with $5 from their own pocket and $10 from the government's means the still come out ahead.
Too bad for the folks who were not in line to get the vouchers...
Joe Friday seems incapable of understanding this.
Government has been overspending for decades and inflation has been low..so no NOT Biden’s fault.
This inflation is due to disruption of global supply chains and worker furloughs due to covid. Most of the inflation now is higher energy prices because collapse of energy prices in 2020 and resulting shuttered rigs.
Onshoring production will add to inflation as well.
"inflation has been low"????? - by what standard?
Monopoly money? There's not a single item anymore that depreciates faster than the USD. Is that the "standard"?