Most of us remember when a gallon of gas was less the $2, or a quart of milk less than $1, or housing was last affordable in the 1970s. I remember the inflation surges in housing. What happened?
Shouldn’t we as voters understand inflation if a majority of voters were so angry about the soaring price of everything that the majority would find somebody to blame (President Biden), and elect somebody else (Donald Trump) who said he will make everything better, even though that didn’t happen during his first term?
It is a peculiar form of American amnesia that caused so many to vote against their own interests—in this case a majority of white women to vote for a sexual predator and abortion opponent, young working class males to support a con-artist who had stiffed or defrauded his own workers and filed bankruptcy multiple times to avoid paying them.
It has to be because everything is happening too fast in our high-Tech driven economy and culture (Internet?) that has left so many people still wanting to live in a world they remember or imagine.
This happened at least once before and signaled how difficult it is for Americans to face forward rather than look backward to a time that never was, even though they crave change. It was first noticed in Thomas Frank’s 2005 best-seller: What’s the Matter With Kansas; How Conservatives Won the Heart of American?
Such nostalgia enabled GW Bush to win a second term, although he started his wars on terror by lying about weapons of mass destruction after failing to anticipate 9/11.
To understand what happened with Trump’s false economic narrative—that Americans were better off financially in his first term—we should understand the complexity of our own economy.
The main priority of Republicans—tax cuts that Bush and Trump Republicans enacted were a giant scam that actually transferred more wealth to their supporters and imp0verished more working Americans, while adding $trillions to the national debt.
But enough Americans remembered an earlier, whiter America that had experienced a victorious, post-World War Two prosperity—until the 1970s and school integration, minorities wanting more rights (including women), the killings of the Kennedy brothers and Martin Luther King, Jr., and a Vietnam War tore our country apart.
It’s hard to imagine such a tumultuous history today several generations later.
Republicans have always favored tax cuts that enriched themselves, but not better healthcare for Americans—especially women and children.
So how should voters understand the American economy? Firstly, we have been living in what has been called the second Gilded Age that has favored the wealthiest since the 1970s, and not ordinary workers whose household incomes have stagnated since then.
But most Americans probably understand it’s most basic tenet: The Law of Supply and Demand. It’s an economic term, but based on commone sense. The price of things depends on the supply of things. And when there is an abrupt shortage, such as oil and gas because of the Arab oil embargo that cut off OPEC (The Organization of Oil Exporting Countries) oil imports in the 1970s, gas prices soared. And that began the upward cycle of price fluctuations.
Meanwhile, more than 80 million baby boomers became consumers at the same time who wanted more of everything. And the housing industry couldn’t build enough dwellings to satisfy the increased demand.
This is as good a common sense explanation as any to understand inflation. Prices go up or down when they aren’t in equilibrium—i.e., too much supply lowers prices, while too much demand from consumers and businesses raises them.
The same thing happened with the COVID-19 pandemic that killed one million Americans. The worldwide shutdowns and shelter-in-place requirements to keep it from spreading caused massive shortages of everything, which caused the price hikes that infuriated so many.
Consumers couldn’t very well blame COVID-19, a virus like the flu though much more virulent, but they could blame who was supposed to protect Americans from it.
What is most remarkable is that prices had been rising rapidly since the 1970s, but Americans hadn’t reacted as angrily as they did after the COVID-19 pandemic—maybe because of the trauma from so many lives lost—whole families in some cases.
Inflation is like the frog in water that has been slowly coming to a boil. For whatever reason, we have only noticed it since the water (meaning our economy) has come to a boil from the pandemic’s aftereffects that have most hurt our working class, many of whom had lost jobs as globalization moved good paying manufacturing jobs overseas in the name of making everything cheaper.
Most of us remember when a gallon of gas was less the $2, or a quart of milk less than $1, or housing prices were last affordable in the 1970s, as I said. But there was no quick cure. The OPEC oil embargo jump-started the decade-long inflation surge in the 1970s, for instance.
What can be done to cure the current inflation surge? Republicans and Trump’s “Drill Baby Drill” promise can’t do much to lower oil prices because the U.S. already produces more oil than it uses, while adding more CO2 to the atmosphere that is accelerating global warming, that endangers whole parts of the country.
And higher proposed tariffs won’t increase the supply of anything and might lower demand, since it makes imports more expensive because it is a tax on imported goods.
There are two solutions that the Biden administration have implemented, but Republicans don’t like—federal funds to make construction of affordable housing cheaper, and the elimination of loopholes that encourage the profit-taking by cartel-size pharmaceutical corporations that took advantage of the pandemic shortages and continue to raise their prices.
And lastly, we need more comprehensive healthcare legislation that would increase productivity of our workforce because they become healthier. But Republicans have historically opposed that as well, having attempted to repeal Obamacare, the Affordable Care Act, more than 30 times. It is the only private health insurance that insures more than 30 million Americans against preexisting conditions.
Republicans are even talking about downsizing Medicaid and Medicare in the name of increasing efficiency. That will also increase inflation, because M & M keep overall costs of healthcare lower with their power to control treatment and drug prices.
So it’s difficult to know if it was ideology and conspiracy theories triumphing common sense economics that enabled Republicans to win this election.
Inflation has returned to its historic norm, and the American economy is fully employed so everyone’s job is safe. Many voters want someone to blame for their myriad anxieties, as Kansans had done two decades earlier.
We will now have to worry if this Gilded Age will end as did the last one. So much wealth had been accumulated in too few hands that it caused the Great Depression and led to World War Two.
Harlan Green © 2024
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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