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Now that President Joe Biden has announced he is seeking a second term in office, the most pressing question may be why? After all, every survey of public opinion finds the view of the U.S. economy is somewhere between dismal and dire.
What else would you expect in an era when perception drives the prevailing media narrative, feeding what seems like a never-ending doom loop of negativity when it comes to the economy? For all the griping, though, it's worth remembering George Orwell's timeless assertion that the hardest thing to see is right in front of one's nose.
Start with the fact that the economy during Biden's 27 months in the White House witnessed the greatest and fastest recovery of gross domestic product in modern times, an experience unmatched by any administration in at least half a century, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That the U.S. has outperformed every major developed economy in recovering from a pandemic that claimed more than one million American lives should dispel any notion the 46th president inherited a situation that was anything remotely like his 12 post-World War II predecessors.
Growth in gross domestic product exceeding 3% is three times the average under Donald Trump, paving the way for record corporate earnings, the lowest corporate debt ratios, rising real incomes, surging homeowners' equity in real estate to go along with the lowest mortgage delinquency rate on record, and household checking accounts flush with some $5 trillion of cash. And, no, your 401(k) has not suffered under Biden; the benchmark S&P 500 Index is up 23% since the November 2020 election.
For all that, the labor market is the real star. No president since Lyndon Johnson can match Biden's record here. He has created the equivalent of six times more jobs than the last three Republican presidents combined. Some 824,000 jobs were created alone in the high-paying manufacturing sector amid the biggest commitment to rebuilding roads, airports, bridges and ports since the Eisenhower administration's new national highways. We have a jobless rate that is the lowest in a peacetime economy since World War II, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Consider that unemployment is at all-time lows in 24 states and less than 3% in 21, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The unemployment rate for Blacks has never been lower, nor has the gap with the overall jobless rate been narrower.
To be sure, the number of economists calling for a recession gets longer by the day as the Federal Reserve continues its unprecedented tightening of credit by raising interest rates to bring the rate of inflation back down to its 2% target. But while we wait — and wait — for the economic downturn that was deemed inevitable and imminent more than a year ago, the cost of living as measured by the Consumer Price Index has eased for nine consecutive months, to 4.99% in March from the recent high of 9.06% in June and is likely to drop to 3.2% by the end of this year, according to the average of 66 economist forecasts compiled by Bloomberg.