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Why Democrats’ Inflation Is A Major Tax Hike On The Poor
The Federalist ^ | May 26, 2021 | Christopher Jacobs

Posted on 05/26/2021 7:23:37 AM PDT by Kaslin

At a time the wealthiest Americans have gotten even richer due to booming times on Wall Street, pernicious inflation would give working families a crushing blow.


resident Biden claims he won’t raise taxes on families making less than $400,000 per year. But given Biden’s twists and turns on taxes—he now wants to eliminate a loophole he and his wife exploited to avoid more than $500,000 in taxes the past four years—Americans have reason to take his campaign promises with a grain of salt.

Even if he does not levy taxes on middle-class families directly, Biden’s free-money policies are beginning to impose a heavy indirect tax increase on families of modest means: Rising inflation. At a time the wealthiest Americans have gotten even richer due to booming times on Wall Street, pernicious inflation would give working families a crushing blow.

Prices of Goods Skyrocketing

A recent Labor Department report noted that in April, the Consumer Price Index rose 4.2 percent on an annual basis compared to April 2020. From March to April of this year, prices rose at a 0.8 percent rate, which equates to roughly 10 percent inflation over an entire year. Both the annual and the monthly increases in April significantly exceeded the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent inflation benchmark.

The Federal Reserve considers this spike in inflation “transitory”—a true enough statement, to a point. Some of the price spikes stem from anomalies due to the pandemic.

For instance, this time last year, oil prices tanked when much of the global economy shut down; that sharp spike downward last year will look like a big spike upward this year, as prices move toward higher, pre-pandemic levels. Other price increases could stem from pandemic-related supply chain issues—for instance, the global chip shortage—that may resolve themselves as things return to normal.

But rising prices could also develop into a longer-term phenomenon. The trillions of dollars that the Federal Reserve continues to pump into the economy, coupled with trillions of dollars of federal spending pushed by Biden and congressional Democrats, could let the inflation genie out of the proverbial bottle, leading to sustained price increases.

Regressive Tax on the Poor

A recent analysis in the Wall Street Journal explained in layman’s terms the problem that prolonged “Bidenflation” would present: “A fall in inflation-adjusted wages hits low- and moderate-income households especially hard, because they dedicate a larger share of their paychecks to covering daily living costs. The numbers might be temporarily skewed, but if inflation persists and is fueled by the Fed or the Biden administration’s policies, it could raise questions about the costs and benefits of those policies for working Americans.”

Ironically enough, even as the Biden administration has dismissed the idea of an explicit gas tax increase to pay for infrastructure spending, inflation would present a de facto increase in the price of fuel—while also raising the price of food, clothing, rent, transportation, and other essentials that comprise a disproportionate share of working-class families’ budgets.

While many Americans were too young to have lived through it personally, we’ve seen this phenomenon before. In the 1960s and 1970s, the combination of high government spending, easy-money policies from central banks, and oil crises in the Middle East led to runaway inflation in the United States and many European countries.

In her 1979 election campaign, future British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher provided tangible evidence of how inflation harms the poor. At one famous photocall, Thatcher—the daughter of a grocer, who understood the struggles working-class families face in ways her wealthier colleagues often did not—held up two bags of groceries.

The very noticeable difference between the size of the two bags showed how five years of a Labour government had eroded the value of “the pound in your pocket” by sharply reducing the value of the goods Britons could buy with their currency:

Another way of looking at inflation’s impact: In April, real inflation grew at a 3 percent annual rate—prices rose by 4.2 percent, while wages rose by only 1.2 percent. If that pace continues over the four years of the Biden administration, a worker earning a $50,000 salary in January 2021 will be able to buy only $44,265 worth of goods with that salary in January 2025.

Some people decided to brag about their $1,400 “stimmy” checks the federal government handed out earlier this year. But if those one-time checks lead to inflation persisting at the level we saw in April, middle-class families will end up thousands of dollars per year poorer.

Big Government Harms the Poor

The inflation spiral of the 1970s demonstrates how government policies end up harming those the left claims to help. As Thatcher famously said in 1976, socialists eventually run out of other people’s money. When they do—and sooner or later, Biden and the Federal Reserve will run out of fiscal firepower—it could leave damaging effects. To put it bluntly, all this “free” money could end up driving American families into the poor house.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: cpi; deficitspending; economy; federalreserve; inflation; joebiden; monetarypolicy; monetarysupply; poverty; prices

1 posted on 05/26/2021 7:23:37 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Inflation is the cruelest tax of all. I know that is a cliche, but it is true. If the buying power or value of each dollar in your pocket and bank account has been reduced, then that is, in effect, a tax.


2 posted on 05/26/2021 7:39:33 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: Kaslin

Its been accepted economic doctrine in the West since at least the 13th century that centrally-issued fiat money ALWAYS benefits the first handlers first (government and its cronies) at the expense of later handlers (workers and savers) and society as a whole.

America’s founders nearly all assumed this to be true.

The great trick of Marxist, Progressive and Keynesian economists in the 20th century was to convince the world that this simple fact was no longer true, and to create the cult of the all-knowing central planner, in the form of modern central bankers.


3 posted on 05/26/2021 7:40:10 AM PDT by PGR88
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To: Kaslin

It’s intended, and will be the excuse for massive tax increases.

The ruling elite loves inflation. It makes the “economic indicator” numbers go up, leading dumb individuals to think that all is going well. Inflation turns your life savings to chicken droppings, making you dependent on government. Plus, they have cost of living adjustments so they don’t care.


4 posted on 05/26/2021 7:52:51 AM PDT by I want the USA back (Non-binary transnormativity is a construct of intersectionality. Leftist gobbledegook stinks.)
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To: Kaslin

This article is very true. Those of us with investments and COLA increases in our contracts will be fine with inflation.

It’s people in low wage jobs with only cash savings that lose out.


5 posted on 05/26/2021 7:54:41 AM PDT by Renfrew
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To: PGR88
Inflation is inevitable -- and damn necessary, too -- in any society like ours where we don't have the emotional maturity and the personal principles necessary to live within our means.

A standard of living fueled only by massive government spending is unsustainable, and will ultimately end in insolvency. Inflation is a way of imposing insolvency quietly over time.

6 posted on 05/26/2021 8:09:44 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("And once in a night I dreamed you were there; I canceled my flight from going nowhere.")
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To: Renfrew

Those who work in low wage jobs get to lose out twice with inflation...once while they are working at these jobs & their measly wages buy less & less...then again when they retire on only Social Security & get raises(maybe) in payments that nowhere near match actual inflation. Been there & doing that right now.


7 posted on 05/26/2021 8:55:57 AM PDT by oldtech
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To: oldtech

only hope: buy the Fed’s meme stocks


8 posted on 06/09/2021 7:17:32 AM PDT by alrea
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To: Kaslin

The coming inflation is de facto debt management.

The old debt is devalued and lenders are left holding the bag

The debt management method is taught to every prince in king school and has been the practice of rulers for thousands of years


9 posted on 06/09/2021 7:22:20 AM PDT by bert ( (KE. NP. N.C. +12) Like BLM, Joe Biden is a Domestic Enemy )
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