Falling labor force participation, along with inflation, could provide the double whammy that creates an economic crisis this fall, they say.
Democrats have relied on this self-inflicted crisis to pass unprecedented, socialist policies, the critics said.
Those policies, some critics told The Epoch Times, have served to set up the country for further crisis.
One critic worries that such a crisis will provide progressives with their latest excuse to force the country to the far-left before the November election in an attempt to buoy their electoral hopes.
Mobilizing the Base
“Much of what they are doing is trying to mobilize their radical base and keep it mobilized for the November election,” conservative business consultant and political commentator Craig Huey told The Epoch Times about Democratic economic policies.In order to keep their voters mobilized, Democrats have come to rely on a crisis atmosphere, said Huey.
So an economic crisis, with people losing their jobs, while contrary to normal political wisdom for a party in the White House, is what is driving Democrat strategy under President Joe Biden, said Huey.
“It’s an ideological driven-bureaucracy” that needs to drive ideological voters to the polls, Huey said about the strategy.
Similarly, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) said that the Democrats are fully aware of the harm that Biden and the Democrats are doing to the economy by inflationary spending that discourages working.
US Labor Force Declining
Scott said that one consequence of Biden’s policies is a labor force participation rate that is “shockingly low” already.The decline, some argue, has diminished the gloss from the 20 percent in labor force gains the economy has made since Biden was inaugurated and the country generally gave up on COVID-19 lockdowns.
Job Openings, Hours Worked Are Falling
On Aug. 1, industry data reported by Reuters from the private employment specialist Homebase said that hours for workers declined by 12 percent in July for small business workers tracked by their company.Earlier this week there were further signs of a cooling job market.
Rising Interest Rates and Higher Unemployment
Professor Peter Morici, an economist at the University of Maryland, told The Epoch Times that it’s an open question about how badly the Federal Reserve wants inflation to get to its target rate of 2 percent.“I don’t know that they are willing to keep interests so high to get inflation to 2 percent,” said Morici.
Morici said that it might take an unemployment rate of 9 percent to get inflation much below 4 percent.
“This is a very different economy than the pre-COVID-19 economy,” said Morici.
The economy, under the Democrat’s vision, is willing to pay extra costs to transition to a green economy by not using oil and gas and generally paying more for labor.
The Case Against a Crisis
But Morici feels that Democrats don’t want to precipitate a crisis for one simple reason: He thinks that establishment figures, including members of the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee, will do what they can to prevent Trump from becoming president again.“That’s the last thing that they want to happen,” Morici concluded.
The implication is that the Federal Reserve will try not to allow unemployment to go up too much, less it improve Trump’s chances to win the presidency, said Morici.
Progressives Want Lower Interest Rates
The House progressive caucus has said that “disadvantaged, lower-paid, and Black and Latino workers are disproportionately harmed,” by rising interest rates, pleading with central bankers to keep interest rate hikes to a minimum saying “the burden of high costs is not borne equally.”The Federal Reserve, however, has responded to talk from economists, the stock markets, and politicians that the central bankers might not be that serious about the 2 percent inflation target by publicly reiterating that they will continue to raise interest rates until inflation moderates.
And the Federal Reserve has made clear this week that they’ll keep at higher interest rates until they get inflation back to 2 percent, even while politicians and the stock market fret about employment.
Tension Between the Federal Reserve and Politicians
The result is increasing classical tension between Federal Reserve policy that favors higher interest rates in an inflationary environment—and the consequent unemployment that will be created by higher interest rates—and the politicians who want to keep inflationary spending going.The tension is likely to come to a head at some point.
“It’s time for Republicans and Democrats in Washington to wake up and stop endorsing reckless, inflation-fueling spending that is crushing American families,” Scott told The Epoch Times.
Scott asserted that despite the inflationary pressure that Biden’s policies have created, “he has done nothing to reverse course” and instead has expanded those policies in response.
“Democrats’ only answer is another wasteful, tax hiking proposal that will kill more jobs and raise costs on families, especially our seniors, who are already struggling,” said Scott.
And until the classic tension between inflationary spending and the unemployment it will create is resolved, the crisis atmosphere will, at the very least, continue, if not almost certainly expand, critics said.
In part, the crisis could continue because Democrats see rising prices and unemployment as the way by which they can continue expand government control over Americans if not over elections, Huey noted.
“In fact, rising energy prices are not unintended consequences of their policies, but rather the envisioned outcomes,” the commentary continued.
The same could be true of unemployment if it serves the best interest of the far-left, warned Huey.
“Obviously they know that when there is a crisis they can gain power and control, they can expand the scope of government over the lives of individuals,” Huey said of Democrats.
“They are so ideologically committed to the creation of a socialist utopia that the reality of economics means nothing to them” in their quest to retain and expand power, Huey added.
The Epoch Times has reached out to the White House for comment.