Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen Defends “Bidenomics” As Overall Prices Remain WAY UP Under Biden
Treasury Sec. Yellen Denies High Prices Caused By “Bidenomics,” Admits High Prices Here To Stay
On 2/8/2024, While testifying before the Senate Banking Committee, Yellen admitted that prices for most items are unlikely to return to where they were before the inflation crisis began in 2021. “I don’t expect the level of prices to go down. Some prices will be higher than they were before the pandemic, and will stay higher,” Yellen said during a contentious exchange with Sen. John Kennedy, R-La. “But wages have risen considerably, and the pace of price increases has now receded over the past six months.”
Inflation is coming down faster than most economists expected, but Americans hoping for a widespread drop in prices may be disappointed, according to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. Prices for everything including groceries, new cars and health insurance surged in 2021 and 2022 as the result of rampant inflation, which was caused by pandemic-induced disruptions in the global supply chain, an extremely tight labor market and increased consumer demand fueled in part by stimulus cash.
But even though the pace of inflation has cooled sharply in recent months, prices for most goods have not yet receded — and are unlikely to do so, Yellen said. “We don’t have to get the prices down, because wages are going up,” she said, noting that the median worker in the U.S. can buy the same basket of goods as they did in 2019 with $1,400 leftover. “So Americans, on average, are better off in spite of the fact that the level of prices is higher.”
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell echoed a similar sentiment in an interview with “60 Minutes”: “The prices of some things will decline. Others will go up. But we don’t expect to see a decline in the overall price level. That doesn’t tend to happen in economies, except in very negative circumstances,” Powell said.
While inflation has fallen considerably from a peak of 9.1% notched during June 2022, it remains above the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal. And when compared with January 2021, shortly before the inflation crisis began, prices are up a stunning 17.6%.
High inflation has created severe financial pressures for most U.S. households, which are forced to pay more for everyday necessities like food and rent. Food prices are up 33.7% from the start of 2021, while shelter costs are up 18.7%, according to FOX Business calculations. Energy prices, meanwhile, are up 32.8%.
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Yellen: don’t expect some prices to go down, don’t have to get prices down because wages up