Why Current ‘Strong Economy’ Doesn't Bode Well for Biden's Reelection Bid

 | Mar 11, 2024 18:27

The Biden team keeps talking about how they can’t believe how underwater the President’s poll numbers are when the economy is so frickin’ good. “As soon as people figure out how frickin’ good it is, they’ll come running to vote for him.”

At some level, one can be sympathetic with that view. Inflation is down to only 3.1%, the Unemployment Rate is still sub 4% even with the most recent rise, well below the levels when he took office; Average Earnings are up and gasoline prices are down around $3 after being above $5. What’s not to like? Moreover, put this record next to Trump’s record! When Trump came into office, Unemployment was 4.7% and when he left it was 6.7%!

The problem that the Biden team has – and, frankly, the one it has always had – is that they have no idea how actual people experience the economy and no idea how actual people think.

Americans, on average, tend to be fair. When people think about the Trump years, they recognize that it isn’t quite fair to saddle him with COVID. While they don’t think this explicitly, their memories about the 2016-2020 period fall into “pre-COVID” and “post-COVID” zones.

In other words, if in mid-March 2020 a particular consumer was positively disposed towards the Trump economy, then that’s what their memory is. When COVID hit, it started a new time period in their memory. So to the normal person, they remember Trump coming in with a 4.7% Unemployment Rate and watching as it fell to 3.5% in February 2020. “Then COVID hit.” This works against Trump in little ways too; no one gives him credit for the disinflation that happened between March 2020 and the end of his term.

So this is the way that normal people see Trump’s record: