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Silver State Times

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Cortez Masto mum on inflation concerns, Build Back Better Act

Catherin

U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto | Catherine Cortez Masto/Facebook

U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto | Catherine Cortez Masto/Facebook

Nevada U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto did not respond to a query about whether the Biden administration’s Build Back Better Act should pass the Senate in spite of its expected addition of $3 trillion to the national debt.

Silver State Times sought the Democratic lawmaker’s view on the need to pass the bill given Americans’ rising concerns about inflation and new social spending.

Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia said over the weekend that he could not support the Build Back Better bill in its current form, given its possible effects on inflation. The apparent failure of the bill to attract enough Democratic votes to pass the Senate also led Goldman Sachs to reduce its projections on U.S. economic growth in the coming year.

A recent Congressional Budget Office report found that the national debt would rise by $3 trillion in the likely event that the bill's social spending programs are extended beyond the short initial time periods.

Such projections come as economic data shows that the U.S. inflation rate in December reflected a 39-year high, according to Fox Business News. 

"Inflation at a nearly 40-year high is not something the Federal Reserve can ignore,” Danielle DiMartino Booth, a former Dallas Fed adviser, said. “While gas prices are starting to decline, there is still plenty of food inflation. There is risk now that inflation has become entrenched in households’ psyches, which further pressures policymakers at the Fed to be more aggressive in their tightening stance."

The U.S. producer price index jumped 9.6% in November compared to the same time in 2020, according to CNBC. Prices rose 0.7% during the month of November alone when food, energy and trade services costs are factored out — the largest gain on record.

Such price reports seem to be spooking consumers. A recent Morning Consult survey concluded that six out of 10 voters are “very concerned” about inflation, while 27% are “somewhat concerned." Concerned voters included large majorities of both Republicans and Democrats, the poll found.

An ABC News-Ipsos poll found that more than two-thirds of U.S. residents opposed the way President Joe Biden has dealt with inflation and that Biden’s approval ratings have dropped on the issues of crime and gun violence. Biden said he expects inflation to decline if the Build Back Better Act passes, even with the expected surge in the national debt if the plan becomes law.

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget said that the bill would have mixed effects on inflation. Those provisions that add to public spending and demand for goods and services will put upward pressure on inflation, according to the committee. But some provisions that boost supply or reduce demand, such as offsetting tax increases, will help to reduce inflation. 

In response to the record-high inflation, Hugh Jackson, former editor of the Las Vegas Business Press, senior editor at the Las Vegas CityLife weekly newspaper, daily political commentator on the Las Vegas NBC affiliate, and author of the Las Vegas Gleaner political blog, remarked, “The prevailing political analysis is right: If inflation stays high into the summer, the Democrats are toast in the midterms, nationally and here in Nevada.”

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