The first televised debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump of this year’s US presidential election sounded the opening bell on the contest between the two candidates. After three and a half years, Biden is keen to showcase his economic achievements. Reducing inflation will be one of his trump cards. Yet many, including Trump, think the figures and statistics do not reflect the reality of the US economy.
The cost of basic items needed in every household, and the impact this has on a household’s disposable income, is highly charged. Biden knows that many Americans do not feel that they are yet benefitting from the wins he wants to talk about. This is one of the many reasons why 2024 is such a contentious presidential election. It is also the first time since 1892 that two White House occupants (either current or former) have faced off against each other.
Trump, who has become a convicted felon since he reluctantly left office, seems to be riding high in the polls, while Biden is the first US president to have his son convicted during his term of office (for drug-related firearm charges). Although Biden might benefit from the trend of US presidents being re-elected, his advanced age could work against him. He is currently five years past the average US life expectancy and would be 86 by the end of any second term. That may count in voters’ minds, not least because his lapses and falls have been so accentuated.
Building on Bidenomics
Biden’s campaign slogan—Let’s Finish the Job—builds on the groundwork he laid in his 2024 State of the Union address, where he highlighted the achievements of his economic policies (known as Bidenomics) and his plan to complete other projects. Biden says he inherited a poor economy from Trump due in large part to Trump’s failure to address the pandemic, disregarding experts’ advice in the belief that the virus would disappear within a few weeks.
It did not, and as Americans went to the polls, businesses were closing, millions were losing their jobs, and up to 40 million faced the risk of eviction. As the world waited for vaccines, hundreds of thousands of Americans died (the final figure was 1.2 million). Biden's administration, which took power in January 2021, managed to control the pandemic and the subsequent recession, so he is happy to focus on this area because today's US economy is admired worldwide.
Around 15 million new jobs have been created in the past three years, unemployment is at its lowest level in 50 years, and a record number of Americans (16 million) have started small businesses. Additionally, more people now have health insurance than ever before, the racial wealth gap has shrunk to its narrowest in a generation, wages have risen, and inflation has dropped from 9% to 2.7%, the lowest in the world, with a downward trend.
Stimulating investment
The recovery was achieved through massive state rescue schemes, the most important being the American Rescue Plan Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Although Biden has a neoliberal economic philosophy, these packages were more in-keeping with an interventionist state, providing a larger social safety net.
Furthermore, foreign imports (especially from China) have been curtailed, which has had a positive impact on US jobs. The expansion of US-made exports also grew jobs domestically. For the first time since the 1930s, Americans now mainly buy products that are 'Made in America'. During the pandemic, strict lockdown rules in Asia led to a worldwide shortage of semiconductors, which in turn led to price rises in everything they are used in, from mobile phones to cars.
Rather than rely on the importation of US-designed semiconductors that are made abroad, American firms have now invested billions of dollars building new semiconductor factories in the US, creating well-paying jobs in the process. Thanks to the Creating Helpful Incentives to Biden-sponsored Produce Semiconductors (CHIPS) and Science Act, enacted in 2022, the US is investing more in research and development than ever before. It has helped revive semiconductor production in the US, attracting $157bn of investments and creating 25,400 jobs.
Yet that is dwarfed by the $650bn of private sector investments in clean energy. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which Trump proposed eliminating, has put the US on a path towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2030.
Jobs and price cuts
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, also called the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, has led to 46,000 new projects including upgrades to roads, bridges, ports, airports, public transport systems, and more.
In healthcare, pressure on major pharmaceutical companies has reduced the price of drugs. Insulin, for instance, has fallen from $400 to $35 per month, benefiting one in every eight Americans, or 38.4 million people. Negotiations with Medicare also lowered the price of 500 treatments for cancer, heart disease, arthritis, and other conditions. Trump, by contrast, plans to reverse these wins by repealing the Affordable Care Act, which made the price reductions possible.
On housing, Biden's annual tax credit gives Americans $400 per month to help pay their mortgages when they buy their first home or relocate. There are also plans to crack down on landlords who violate antitrust laws to raise rents. Beyond that, federal funding will help build 1.7 million new housing units nationwide. There are also plans to reduce education costs, increase grants for working families, and invest in higher education to help Hispanic and Black minorities. Student loans have also been modified to alleviate massive debt burdens for about 4 million Americans.
Reality vs perceptions
Despite all this, many US voters still see the glass as half-empty and question Biden's promises. Unemployment rose slightly to 4% in May from 3.9%, and some new jobs are temporary, part-time, or seasonal. Biden's critics have jumped on this. According to a Yahoo and Stat Ipsos study, only one in five Americans thinks the US is performing better than other rich countries. Two-thirds do not think inflation has come down.
James Galbraith of the University of Texas thinks the Misery Index—which measures factors like unemployment and inflation—can be misleading. Unemployment typically affects only some of the population, while inflation affects most. The important thing is not the general slowing of price rises but price slowdowns and purchasing power. Since 2021, when Biden took office, real wages have fallen by 1.4% due to inflation. Angus Deaton, a professor of economics at Princeton University, thinks the issue goes deeper than purchasing power and impacts education and healthcare.
"How can it be said that the country is in good shape when life expectancy for two-thirds of the population has decreased over the past 15 years?" he asks.
"Moreover, increases in interest rates, or keeping them high, will eventually act as a brake on activity and the recovery of purchasing power, which will be recorded as a failure in Bidenomics and Biden's policies."