Inflation Jump Highlights Biden's Vulnerability on Energy
When theories fail and economic rules reassert themselves, it’s human beings who feel pain.

Inflation has blipped back up to nibble at Americans' budgets and patience. While the rise is relatively modest, it's enough to revive the public's concerns about the eroding value of their dollars. Worse for the Biden administration, the most severe effects were seen in the price of gasoline, which emphasizes the White House's vulnerability on economics and, especially, energy. The pain will be felt by consumers, and they'll be looking for somebody to punish.
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Prices Outstrip Wages
"The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) rose 0.6 percent in August on a seasonally adjusted basis, after increasing 0.2 percent in July," the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported September 13. "Over the last 12 months, the all items index increased 3.7 percent before seasonal adjustment."
Gasoline alone accounted for more than half of the increase; prices were up 10.6 percent from the previous month. The price of a gallon of regular is down from the all-time high of $5.016 on June 14, 2022, according to AAA. But at $3.858 per gallon it's higher than it was a week ago or a month ago, which means more pain at the pump for people fueling their vehicles.
Compared to the annual inflation rates of last year, which hit 9.1 percent in June 2022, August's 3.7 percent rate is modest. But it's up from 3.2 percent in July and inflation is cumulative, incrementally eroding purchasing power often more quickly than wage increases can match.
"Real average hourly earnings for all employees decreased 0.5 percent from July to August, seasonally adjusted," the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported at the same time it released CPI figures. "Real average weekly earnings decreased 0.1 percent over the month due to the change in real average hourly earnings combined with a 0.3-percent increase in the average workweek." On an annual basis, from August 2022 to August 2023, real average hourly earnings increased just 0.5 percent.
To put it another way, to purchase what cost $100 in 2019, the last year before the pandemic and its accompanying inflationary government policies, you needed $114.47 in 2022, according to the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER). 2023 values will be calculated after the end of this year.
"Inflation is still trending broadly in the right direction," AIER economist Alexander William Salter assures those of us wincing at the news. "The Federal Reserve shouldn't consider another rate hike, at least not yet. The inflation uptick for August was disproportionately driven by energy prices. Those rose 5.6 percent in August alone—a major swing! Gasoline in particular is up 10.6 percent monthly. But let's remember that energy prices are notoriously volatile."
That offers at least some comfort for Americans who would like their paychecks to stop eroding before their eyes. Energy prices are volatile, which is why, along with food prices, they're not included in measures of so-called core inflation (which came in at an annual rate of 4.3 percent in August, down from 4.7 percent in July). But gasoline is also a necessary purchase for most people. The current inflation news highlights a major vulnerability for the president and his supporters.
Inconvenient Energy Policy
"Canceling all remaining oil and gas leases issued under the previous administration in the Arctic Refuge and protecting more than 13 million acres in the Western Arctic will help preserve our Arctic lands and wildlife," President Biden announced September 6 in a much-publicized statement.
The Biden administration is publicly committed to "end fossil fuels" and forcibly shift U.S. energy production from oil and gas to "renewable" (unless you count mineral inputs for generators and batteries) solar and wind. That means explicitly blocking oil and gas drilling, but also discouraging investment in parts of the energy industry disfavored by the regulatory environment.
"The nation's capacity to refine crude oil into fuel and other products fell below 18 million [barrels per day] at the beginning of 2022 and hit its lowest level since 2014," S&P Global Commodity Insights noted last year.
Capacity ticked up a little since then, though it's likely to decline over time as refineries slowly close.
"Refiners are unlikely to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in recommissioning costs for only one or two years of strong returns, against a backdrop of the Biden administration's promise to 'end fossil fuels,'" the Institute for Energy Research commented in June 2022 as gasoline prices soared.
Whatever benefits, if any, a shift to solar and wind may offer in the future, reduced fossil fuel production threatens higher costs for consumers who need energy, especially gasoline, now. And while other factors, including Russian and Saudi gamesmanship, play a big role in oil prices, there is a good chance people will assume the president is keeping his promise to "end fossil fuels."
A Political Price to Pay
"A majority of respondents to the Redfield & Wilton Strategies/Newsweek poll blamed the Biden administration for the surge in gas prices, with 55 percent saying that the recent increase was 'primarily' caused by the U.S. government mismanagement," Newsweek reported this week of a poll conducted before the release of the latest inflation numbers.
The president is already vulnerable on matters of dollars and cents. Only 36 percent of those recently polled by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research approve of his handling of the economy. The White House has been pushing back, boasting of supposed economic successes, but that hasn't budged public opinion.
Lingering inflation and rising gasoline prices won't convince anybody that they're prospering.
Pocketbook Pain
Of course, politics aside, the bigger question is how the eroding dollar affects people's lives. Data shows that spending is up on essentials including housing, transportation, and food, and down in discretionary areas such as entertainment. The relative gloom is expected to continue for the near future, with inflation taking much of the blame.
"Median one- and five-year-ahead inflation expectations rose slightly in August," the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported this week of consumer survey results. "Similarly, year-ahead expectations about households' financial situations deteriorated in August with the share of households expecting a worse financial situation in one year from now rising."
As budgets are pinched by prices that outstrip wages, people feel real distress. Government officials constantly experiment with money, debt, spending, energy, and economic matters, indulging trendy theories as if they're playing a game. But when theories fail and economic rules reassert themselves, it's human beings who feel pain, at the gas pump and elsewhere.
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There is no inflation, and it is coming down.
That's the official line, and you better stick to it.
(for further proof, of there was really inflation, unions would be striking over wages)
I'm making $90 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning 16,000 US dollars a month by working on the connection, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply. Everybody must try this job now by just using this website... http://www.Payathome7.com
Well, I'm sure that after the DNC has replaced Biden with Gavin Nuisance and shoehorned him into office, all of this will get better for America. Gavin really seems like he knows how to improve an economy.
FML.
One of the UAWs biggest complaints is the bailout deal Obama forced them into removed inflation adjusted salary adjustments. Hilarious in its own right.
Except for Reason's sugar daddy Charles Koch, the richest people on the planet are doing great in the Biden economy. That's what really matters.
So who cares if Americans with sub-10-figure net worths are paying more for necessities?
#OBLsFirstLaw
#Bidenomics
Increasing prices due to supply shortages are not "inflation".
LOL
No, this actually correct. The prices go up, and it still sucks for consumers, but “inflation” is a measurement of the value of the currency. If we (somehow, magic wand or some shit) managed to halt inflation today, at this current place, the inflation that had occurred would still be there. But if someone sane and coherent won the presidency and reversed all of this bullshit, and gasoline prices went back down, that wouldn’t be reducing inflation, it’d just be reducing the price of energy in those inflated dollars.
Basically, both effects are occurring. There's a supply shortage, which drives up the price, and there's inflation, which makes it take more currency to pay the shortage increased price.
Yes that's right. Part of the problem is the term inflation has become a catch-all term. Monitary inflation is a result of central bankers and politicians believing that they can engineer the economy by adjusting the supply. The consumer pays more and decides prices have gone up when the reality is the value of the currency has gone down. This works very well for politicians who convince the public to blame big (insert evil industry) for rising prices instead of blaming government for destroying the currency.
And when the shortage is due to bad policy(see gas prices)? And then compounded by further bad policy of money printing? Seems like something happened in Feb 2020 that caused a giant shift.
Well, we need to keep causes for price increases separate:
- lots of it is due to money printing and handouts by the US government
- absurd regulations and disruptions of supply chains caused additional price increases
- Biden's insulting and inept foreign policy is causing the increases in oil and gas prices
Lumping all of this together as if it had a single cause just lets the Biden administration play a blame shifting shell game
More than Biden's foreign policy on that. It's also his energy policy that's driving up gas and oil prices.
Oh, it's a giant helping of both.
This administration can be summed up with a single word:
Gaslighting
The levels are really quite impressive.
Gas lights aren't allowed any longer, you have to use renewables. Only, it won't be someone trying to fuck with your head on purpose when the solar powered lights get dimmer, that's just what happens as the batteries run down after dark.
Sooo…solarlighting is the new gaslighting?
Well, at least the Bad Orange Man wasn't allowed to continue making mean tweets from the Oval Office. And that makes this all just fine.
Adults back in the room.
#Reason
Joe Biden is "adult" all right. Just ask Ashley Biden.
Adults wear diapers and don't work after 9 a.m. #Reason
50 years of government experience is rolling into practice right now to fix inflation and rising fuel prices right now. I feel confident, don't you all?
I feel confident he'll get another 81M votes in 2024
Even if he’s dead.
Weekend at Bernie’s 2, Nuclear War Boogaloo.
Especially if he is dead.
(No more embarrassing on camera screw ups.)
Hey, there are still a few drops in the SPR to use. We are fine. Plus banning all the gas stoves will make a difference
The Climate Hoax strikes again and again and again and again.
That BS hoax about only Gov-Gods of a Nazi-Regime packing ‘guns’ against the people and their resources can control the weather which humorously the weather crisis can't even be identified as warming or cooling so just as long as the weather changes it's a crisis. (amazing the stupidity behind it)
When really it’s more likely Democrats know they can get elected more-so in an economic crisis thus purpose create hardships on the people in order to continue building their Nazi-Empire taking over the USA.
Solar and Wind are NOT going to cut it. Not even close. A freight truck runs 450hp which is = 330KW * 1.25(80% eff) that’s 412,500 (220W 64″x26″ 1664sqin 11.5sqft) full sized solar panels for ONE Truck in direct sunlight only. Taking up an area of 4,743,750sqft or 109-acres and costing $103M just in panels.
That’s for ONE-SINGLE Truck for ~12hrs of direct sunlight. Even if you want to say trucks down run full-hp all day the downhill would barely cover night driving.
...course the easiest way to spot the BS is simply asking why does it take 'guns' (gov-guns) to sell the shit? If it was feasible ever after years and years it wouldn't require 'guns' to sell it.
Electric vehicles actually predate the internal combustion engine driven automobiles designed by Benz in the 1860s (considered the first automobiles). If EV made any market sense, in the 160 years of their existence they would have replaced ICE a long time ago. The fact that they haven't is all the proof that is needed to show they are not a viable option.
Sort of. But before rechargeable lithium batteries and brushless electronically commutated motors it was a whole lot less practical.
But I think any battery powered EV is still not very practical.
They're maybe useful for short commutes, in temperate environments, which makes up most people's travels. But not everyone or every trip by far. And the push to electrify semis, military vehicles and such makes even less sense. Especially when EV batteries already have a propensity to explode and burn, just imagine serving in an Abrams and getting hit by a sabot round in your massive Lithium Ion batteries. Would make a Sherman look downright flame resistant
Electric semis is a fucking superturboretarded concept.
The 2019 Freightliner Cascadia I drove in 2020 and 2021 averaged 10.5 mpg. That's everything, uphill, downhill, loaded, empty (which was still 34,000 lbs) in all weather conditions. I had 240 gallons of fuel tanks on me. I could drive all damned day, for several days, before I needed to refuel.
240 gallons of fuel is 1800 lbs. 1800 lbs of batteries isn't taking a 34,000 lbs truck very far, and certainly not when loaded to 80,000 lbs. So when you start piling batteries on, somewhere, you lose capacity, and you probably still can't drive for a full 11 hour shift on a single charge. And gods above and below, every single truck stop would have to retrofit the whole damned parking lot to have chargers, every trucker would have to park at a truck stop every night... and the idea of parking trucks near posts with a 480V 400A drop terrifies me. The logistical nightmare of such a conversion isn't something I think I can even fully contemplate, and I've done the damned job.
No. Just no.
A sabot round in your turbine powerpack isn't exactly a welcome event either, but I agree with your point...
>>Inflation has blipped back up
I'm no big-city economist but haven't the real numbers been in double-digits this whole time?
The fact is inflation has increased every month since Biden took office. The rate slowed somewhat, but prices have continued to increase month to month. When GDP and consumer spending are adjusted for inflation, consumer spending isn't strong. We're just spending more for the same (or often) fewer goods. I get an annual raise (sometimes) but if prices go up every month without abating, that raise isn't worth much two or three months after I get it.
Excuse me? It's now 3.7%, nearly the normal amount.
3.7% above lat year, which was 9% above the year before you stupid lying fuck. And 2% is not the normal amount but what central planners consider desirable. Jesus fucking Christ you're an idiot or I'm misreading your sarcasm.
"Inflation has blipped back up."
It never really went down, as anyone who has tried to purchase things that aren't included in the index can tell you.
Also, what's the real inflation number if you calculate it like we used to?
Got to love the polls where 30-40 percent are always happy. If I'm a D, and D's are running the place it's great. If I'm an R, and R's are running the place it's great.
There is almost nothing they wouldn't approve of for their team.
Also, why the fuck does anyone take core inflation seriously? Yes energy and food are variable but they, along with rent/mortgages, tend to take up the majority of people's income, therefore increases in them invariably hurts consumers more than more 'stable' products.
And energy prices also impact everything else, so ignoring them is again a disingenuous means to underplay the harm to consumers.
Our dependence on oil for energy speaks clearly to our vulnerability to oil producers such as Saudi Arabia & Russia:
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/09/05/saudi-arabia-to-extend-voluntary-cut-of-1-million-barrels-per-day-until-the-end-of-the-year.html
I will guarantee that Biden's biggest headwind to re-election will be the fact that the Saudis will be keeping production low in order to limit the US economy & give the advantage to the GOP candidate, preferably Trump whom they largely own (consider the $2 Billion down payment given to Jared).
Another fucking idiot. Oil production was so high in the US under Trump that it nearly bankrupted the Saud's. And we weren't even producing at peak production. Say you know nothing but empty talking points from the gaslighting left without saying you know nothing but empty talking points from the gaslighting left.
Hint the Saudi royal family needs high oil prices and low US production. So do the Russians. Biden's policies have been a godsend to both countries budgets and the bank accounts of the oligarchs in charge of them.
Is Joe Biden in charge of Opec or waht? Inflation rose to 3.7, just below the historical average, due to OPEC cutting production in order to hike gas prices: "Saudi Arabia cuts oil production again to shore up prices
NPR
https://www.npr.org › 2023/06/04 › saudi-arabia-oil-opec
Jun 4, 2023 — OPEC+ countries also agreed to extend oil production cuts they announced in April through the end of 2024,"
Meanwhile grocery prices were at 3% and wages were rising: wages are rising faster than inflation over the past year. that's the good news: The bad news is that as a result ot that good news, the Fed, representing the banks, will raise interestr rates againt to increase unemployment, and of course we an blame Joe Biden for that!
He's definitely been part of the war on oil campaign.
HIGHEST RIG COUNT IN AMERICAN HISTORY YOU LYING LITTLE RATFUCKERS!!!!!!!
-Ugly, morbidly obese, Ron Jeremy lookin' incel Dipshit Dave Weigel
It's the Saudi's, and it's why Biden was in Saudi Arabia a few weeks ago hobnobbing with MBS. Unfortunately, the Saudi's like Donald and Jared better. Just watch, the Saudi's will be raising prices around the election.